Revelation: They are brothers.

Shetty tries to escape. Mary, from her wheelchair, pulls the emergency brake on his car, sending it crashing into a statue of Ganesha (that Akbar had loosened earlier).

The hospital is saved. The brothers sit by Mary’s bedside. She passes away peacefully, holding all three hands.

One year later. They have opened “Mary’s House” — a community center. Amar handles security, Akbar runs a music studio for at-risk youth, Anthony teaches free yoga. The three sit on the steps, eating one plate of jalebis with three forks, arguing about whose turn it is to do the dishes.

They stand back-to-back: Amar bleeding, Akbar limping, Anthony crying.

Three estranged brothers — a stoic army officer, a fiery street rapper, and a gentle yoga guru — discover they were separated at birth during a communal riot. When their dying mother’s hospital is seized by a corrupt developer, they must unite to save her, each using their very different skills.

Fade to black.

Anthony’s dog Jesus has puppies. Each puppy is named after a different god from all three religions. Tagline “Three religions. One mother. Zero chance for the bad guy.”