The film's larger-than-life hero, Akshay Kumar, is not really allowed to be overshadowed by its intriguing premise, which offers an opportunity to talk about the transience of fame, the meaning of it in the age of social media, the nature of true stardom, the manipulation of media, the traps of petty egos, and whether Big Bad bollywood is really all that big or all that bad.

Selfiee, an adaptation of the critically acclaimed and financially successful malayalam film Driving Licence, centres on superstar Vijay Kumar (Akshay Kumar) and one of his most devoted admirers, Om Prakash Aggarwal (Emraan Hashmi). Vijay travels to bhopal for a movie set before visiting the RTO because the final scene requires him to have a new driver's licence. That brings him to Om, who appears to be the only RTO Inspector in Bhopal.

An additional perspective involves a former Vijay co-star who is now a nobody and appears in commercials for products like groyne itch cream, among other things. In an effort to drag Vijay "down to my level," he approaches a tarot card reader (Kusha Kapila). Meghna Malik is being utilised illegally as a corporator who is looking for any opportunity to grab her 15 minutes of fame. Due to a miscommunication, Vijay humiliates Om in front of his superiors and son, who also adores the celebrity. Om promises revenge.

Selfiee is unpredictable in Om's decisions because he is the epitome of a wonderful guy and a family man. Additionally, Vijay, the stereotypically haughty actor and would-be parent, must deal with demands. As a result, it will be interesting to watch where the two will allow their egos lead them. Hashmi's helpless adoration and Akshay's impatient snapping are both effective. a certain point. As the movie drags on and on and the arguments become ludicrously trivial, Vijay and Om are portrayed as helpless kids who need to be beaten up.

Selfiee has the advantage of not trying to be anything it is not. The fact that it isn't even attempting is what's wrong about it.

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