If the first Dhurandhar was a polished, tactical strike on our senses, then Dhurandhar: The Revenge is an all-out, four-hour scorched-earth campaign. I’ve lived and breathed this duology for months, and honestly, standing in the aftermath of Aditya Dhar’s 2026 sequel feels like surviving a cinematic war zone. This isn’t just a movie; it’s a maximalist behemoth that has officially dethroned Baahubali 2 to become the second-highest-grossing Indian film of all time, raking in a staggering ₹1789 crore globally.
As a fan who’s been tracking every leak from the Ghansoli printing press sets to the final frame, here is my deep-dive analysis and report on the film that has divided critics but united the box office in a grip of iron.
Narrative Structure: A Seven-Chapter Descent
Dhar breaks the film into seven distinct chapters, a move that feels less like a movie and more like a high-octane prestige series binged in one sitting.
- “A Burnt Memory” & “Lucifer”: We finally get the gut-wrenching backstory of Jaskirat Singh Rangi. The tragedy in Pathankot—the hanging of his father and the horrific fate of his sisters—serves as the radioactive core of his rage. It explains why Jaskirat doesn’t just want to serve his country; he wants to burn the very concept of “evil” to the ground.
- The Lyari Power Vacuum: Moving into “Ghosts from the Past” and “Trial by Fire,” the film picks up the pieces from the first installment. With Rehman Dakait gone, Hamza (Ranveer Singh) isn’t just a spy; he’s a warlord. The manipulation of the Baloch and Pathan gangs in Karachi is masterfully depicted, showing the “unknown men” operations that have become a staple of modern geopolitical discourse.
- The Climax & “Dhurandhar”: The final chapters are where the film loses its “spy thriller” tag and becomes a full-blown revenge epic. The shipping yard fight and the kerosene tanker explosion are pure adrenaline, though the four-hour runtime does start to feel like a test of endurance by the time we reach the final confrontation with Major Iqbal.
Performance Review: The Stalwarts vs. The Shadows
Ranveer Singh (Hamza/Jaskirat)
Ranveer is doing something here that few actors in India can pull off. He has to carry the ghost of Akshaye Khanna’s Rehman Dakait (who still looms large through hallucinations and archival footage) while evolving Jaskirat into a man who has forgotten his own name. He is unhinged, vulnerable, and terrifyingly cold. The “rooftop revenge” scene—shot with zero VFX at the Lokmat press in Ghansoli—is a masterclass in physical acting.
Arjun Rampal (Major Iqbal)
This was the most anticipated showdown. While Rampal brings a certain sleek, reptilian menace to the ISI operative, he struggles to match the sheer, terrifying charisma that Akshaye Khanna brought to the first film. He’s a different kind of villain—calculating rather than chaotic—but in a film this loud, he sometimes feels slightly overshadowed by the pyrotechnics.
The Scene Stealer: Rakesh Bedi
In a film drenched in testosterone and blood, Rakesh Bedi’s Jameel Jamali is the MVP. His reveal as a long-term Indian asset who was “slowly poisoning Dawood” is the kind of twist that makes you want to stand up and cheer. He provides the only moments of levity (the “white buttocks” joke is already a meme legend) in an otherwise grim narrative.
Technical Craft: Realism in an Unreal Scale
The most impressive part of this “report” has to be the production design. Despite the massive budget, Aditya Dhar leaned into practical filmmaking:
- The Ghansoli Set: The pivotal rain-soaked sequence wasn’t a green screen. The team built a compact 25×20 foot cabin inside a working printing press, using MDF sheets for wood and PVC for flooring.
- Cinematography: The red-tinted lighting and the use of practical explosions give the film a “heavy” feel—you can almost smell the cordite and kerosene.
- The Soundscape: While some argue that Sashwat Sachdev’s score doesn’t quite hit the heights of the first film, the use of repurposed tracks like Rasputin during high-violence sequences adds a surreal, Kubrick-esque layer to the carnage.
The “Propaganda” vs. “Patriotism” Debate
We have to talk about the elephant in the room. The film is unabashedly loud about its politics. It draws directly from real-world events—the “Unknown Men” killings, the IC-814 hijacking references, and the 26/11 trauma.
- The Critique: Critics (like those at The Hindu or IGN) argue the film is a four-hour political manifesto that blurs the line between fiction and “New India” messaging.
- The Counter: For fans, it’s the ultimate “what-if” fantasy. It dramatizes the silent wars fought in the shadows. Whether you love it or hate it, the film forces you to engage with it. It doesn’t ask for your permission; it demands your attention.
Final Verdict & Impact
Dhurandhar: The Revenge is a flawed masterpiece. It’s too long, it’s arguably too violent (that upward headshot in the opening chapters… wow), and it sidelines female characters like Yalina (Sara Arjun) to the point of frustration.
However, as a piece of “Event Cinema,” it is unparalleled. It closes the loop on Jaskirat’s soul, leaving him a man without a country, staring at his home from afar. It’s a haunting end to a violent saga. If Dhurandhar 3 ever happens, it has a mountainous legacy to live up to.
Total Score: 8.5/10 (A 10 for Scale, a 7 for Editing)
