Pathaan Movie
The Pathaan movie’s projected budget is 250 crores of Indian rupees. The Yash Raj films, However, officials anticipate that the Pathaan movie will cost 250 crore Indian rupees. The cost of making these movies is really high. In this film, the rear camera is utilised. The film, however, has just opened in theatres. You can see it between four and five months after. A movie is available on the OTT platform as well.
For a time now, Hindi films have been creating the “desi” versions of the Bond-Bourne series. However, it is “Pathaan” with Shah Rukh Khan acing the action avatar and flaunting the floppy-hair-glittering-aviators-eight packs (or is it twelve?) look that has the spy movie-laced-with-heavy-doses-of-patriotism bouncing off the screen. Tiger has been “zinda” in a pacey double-bill, Agent Vinod has done his part, BellBotto
That’s because it finally has everything an action film should have: non-stop action, glamorous leads, the ability to save the world, high-octane set pieces, and emo lines sprinkled throughout.
Katrina Kaif, who delivered a serious ass kick in Tiger 2, faces heavy competition from the incredibly slender Deepika Padukone, who matches SRK stride for stride. Additionally, Dimple Kapadia plays the sassy counterpart to Moneypenny, building on her blink-and-miss performance in Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet.” And John Abraham, who portrays the main antagonist, makes the most of his opportunity to speak.
Numerous spies, sarcastic RAW directors (Ashutosh Rana), wicked ISI generals, and armed terrorists living in hotspots around the world are all involved in the plot. Pakistan is refocusing on Kashmir (it will never learn, will it). Jim (John Abraham), an inhabitant of India, has abandoned ship.
Rubina, a stunning ISI agent played by Deepika Padukone, looks equally at home in a bikini and skin-tight spandex. In top-secret laboratories, a lethal virus that is far more terrible than Covid 19 is being created. Desh-ke-dushman are crawling all over the place, and there is a very real threat. However, you may relax because Pathaan (Shah Rukh Khan), the best and bravest Indian, is nearby.
The scenes where you force a yawn are where you can see the difficulty in pulling off a two and a half hour film (yes, it can happen even when everything is galloping along at break-neck speed). Just to make sure nothing is left out, Pathaan and Jim engage in a battle in the air (many helicopters suffered injuries during the production of this movie), skim through ice floes and into freezing water, and pursue each other down winding roads.
There is some laugh-out-loud silly material, which is standard for this kind of movie. Additionally, it gets boring hearing about “Pathaan” in the third person (kitni baar bologe, yaar). We were successful the first time, so trust us.
The slack is swiftly tightened, though, when a whole train is commandeered for a special starring Pathaan and a keffiyeh-clad spy whose signature manoeuvres had the audience cheering. And then there is that song, which sparked a great deal of debate weeks before it was released.
There isn’t really anything new about it (YRF songs on beaches should really be a different Bollywood sub-genre), but there’s no denying that Pathaan and Rubina swaying and staring at each other on a Spanish beach is more of a potato than a hot proposition. But let me reassure those who are concerned: alas, nothing besharam occurs even when there is only a gun between them.
The movie comes out at a time when SRK and Bollywood are under attack. Pathaan is that sateek jawaab of this beleaguered pathaan, who manages a number of feats in his comeback after a number of medium-bad to terrible films: gives it to the #BoycottBollywood brigade, pulls off the dishy-and-dishevelled look rippling those abs, give us a laugh-out-loud moment (I won’t give it away, but it involves a line from.