Every Indian wedding has that one gift nobody really asked for. The decorative thali that gets stacked behind the pressure cooker. The bedsheet set in a colour nobody likes. The toaster — which, apparently, somebody did not forget about.
That’s the entire, glorious premise of Toaster, Netflix’s upcoming dark comedy starring Rajkummar Rao and Sanya Malhotra, dropping on April 15, 2026. Rooted in something so ordinary and so recognisable, you can’t help but lean in.
- Director: Vivek Das Chaudhary (debut film)
- Story: Parveez Shaikh | Screenplay: Parveez Shaikh, Akshat Ghildial, Anagh Mukerjee
- Streaming: Netflix, April 15, 2026
- Cast: Rajkummar Rao, Sanya Malhotra, Archana Puran Singh, Abhishek Banerjee, Farah Khan, Seema Pahwa, Upendra Limaye, Jitendra Joshi
- Production: KAMPA Films — Rajkummar Rao and Patralekhaa’s first production banner
What Is Toaster About?
The wedding gift has been exchanged. The smiles have been exchanged. And then — the wedding gets called off. But one man simply refuses to let go of his toaster.
Rajkummar Rao plays Ramakant, a notorious miser who becomes irrationally obsessed with reclaiming the toaster he gifted at a wedding that never happened. What starts as a petty fixation spirals into murder, mayhem, and complete madness — all over a kitchen appliance.
There’s something very Indian about this setup. The cultural weight placed on shaadi gifts — who gave what, how much it cost, whether it was properly acknowledged — is something every desi family has lived through. Toaster takes that very real social tension and dials it up to darkly comic heights.
The Cast
Rao and Malhotra share a natural on-screen chemistry — and this reunion feels well-timed. The supporting cast is a treat in itself. Archana Puran Singh has called this her best role yet. She even fractured her wrist during a shoot in Virar but completed all her scenes anyway, with the crew filming around her cast. Abhishek Banerjee joins at Rao’s personal request, continuing a friendship that goes back years on set.
A Personal Milestone
Toaster is the first film produced under KAMPA Films, the production banner Rajkummar Rao launched with his wife Patralekhaa. She stepped back from acting to produce this one — a deliberate choice to learn filmmaking from behind the camera. For a first production, picking a quirky dark comedy over something safer says a lot about the kind of storytellers they intend to be.
Why It’s Worth Watching
Dark comedy is genuinely hard to get right in Hindi cinema. Too light and it loses its edge. Too dark and it alienates the audience. When it lands, though — think Andhadhun, think Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro — it stays with you long after the credits roll.
Toaster arrives on Netflix without the pressure of a theatrical Friday. You’ll come in curious, not skeptical. That’s the best possible condition for a film like this — discovered on a quiet evening, no expectations, and a plot that begins with a kitchen appliance and ends somewhere nobody saw coming.
The fact that a toaster has become the most talked-about plot device in Indian streaming right now? That’s peak Rajkummar Rao energy.

