If you’ve been waiting for a Hindi spy film that doesn’t spoon-feed patriotism but lets chaos, conflict, and character do the talking, this Dhurandhar movie review is going to be right up your alley. The film walks in with serious confidence, sharp visuals, and a lead who looks like he’s carrying the weight of the nation on his shoulders—and enjoying it. From the first few minutes, you can tell this isn’t the glossy, postcard version of espionage. It’s bruised, loud, morally messy, and very now.
Directed by Aditya Dhar, the mind behind Uri, the film feels like an evolution rather than a repeat. It wants to talk to today’s audience, the ones who scroll fast, question authority, and want their heroes flawed but fierce.