Ranveer Singh in Dhurandhar is one man on a mission: to infiltrate Pakistan, its politics, and its terror-nurturing machinery. But beneath the rogue spy swagger and Karachi-conquering ambition, he is also a man hopelessly, Bollywood-ishly in love with a 20-year-old girl. He falls for her at first sight (of course), declares his feelings with the emotional intelligence of a hand grenade (naturally), and then proceeds to behave like every toxic movie lover we have been fed for decades (predictably).

Ranveer's Hamza is the classic "broody hero" prototype -- the man whose obsession is coded as passion, whose temper is coded as depth, and whose lack of boundaries is coded as emotional intensity. In short: the very hero Bollywood has been glorifying since time immemorial.

In Dhurandhar , w

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