A 67-year-old female had a left eye posterior polar cataract (PPC) with a thin intact posterior capsule (PC) with nuclear sclerosis grade V (as per the lens opacities classification system III) and an intraocular lens (IOL) in the sulcus with an absent PC in the right eye. On examination, her best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was 6/6 (+1.00/+1.50 × 10) and 6/60 (plano) for right eye (OD) and left eye (OS), respectively. She underwent left eye phacoemulsification cataract surgery, and intraoperatively, capsular rupture occurred which was noticed before completion of the last quadrant. No vitreous leakage occurred, and a three-piece IOL was implanted in the sulcus and an optic capture was done. At one-month follow-up, her left BCVA was 6/6 (0.50 DS/+1.25 × 10) with normal IOP, and the IOL was well centered with an oval-shaped anterior capsule covering the optic anteriorly, and a ruptured PC was seen as two parallel lines. We have discussed various important steps in the management of PPC and posterior capsular rent in this paper with the illustrative image of an optic capture of the three-piece IOL in posterior capsular rupture.