Having been driven from his homeland along with his people, Shamshera (Ranbir Kapoor), a tribal leader, is compelled to rob the wealthy, who view themselves as belonging to a higher caste. An indian commander in the british military named Shudh Singh (Sanjay Dutt) betrays Shamshera and forces his tribe into slavery alongside him. Balli (again Ranbir) dedicates his life to this uprising 25 years after Shamshera sacrifices his life fighting to rescue his tribe from the dual clutches of the british and the high-caste people. The main theme of the story revolves around how he frees his tribe and exacts revenge on those who killed his father.


The background music and the slick VFX-driven graphics immediately draw you into the imagined universe set in late 19th-century India. The video quickly provides a framework for the tribe's origins and motivations before delving directly into Shamshera's narrative. From that moment forward, the movie starts to drag. It continues to be a slow-moving action-drama that features a caste-based conflict, a romantic vengeance story, and a run-in with the british Raj.


You'll be exhausted at the end of the movie, to say so without giving away too many plot points. The picture drags through the length with a number of small, but noticeable technical hiccups, feeling far too stretched for its paper-thin plot. Despite this, ranbir kapoor and sanjay dutt continue to be the centre of this drama. The actors give sincere performances despite a mediocre storyline, a weaker writing, and weaker dialogue. Even if he makes a lot of effort to improve a lacklustre script, it is always a pleasure to see Ranbir on film again after a long absence. sanjay dutt portrays a villainous figure. In reality, the performers' interactions on film are very intense each time they appear together.


The supporting players in this drama, such as Ronit Bose Roy, Saurabh Shukla, and Iravati Harshe, don't really add much to the story. If their characteristics had been chosen with greater consideration and care, it would have been very beneficial. It's unexpected that they have such limited room to manoeuvre. Even Sona, a dancer played by Vaani Kapoor, falls far short in terms of an emotional curve. The film's action choreography is excellent, especially in the sequence just before the intermission and in some of the finale.

Ratings: 🌟🌟🌟🌟

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