The film was announced last year in July and after months and months of patience, the audiences get to know what lies beneath the gargantuan iceberg that has the potential to storm the box-office
Ranveer Singh and Aditya Dhar’s spy thriller Dhurandhar finally arrives on the big screen tomorrow. The film was announced last year in July and after months and months of patience, the audiences get to know what lies beneath the gargantuan iceberg that has the potential to storm the box-office. Here are the factors that make this actioner a potential blockbuster of 2025:
A huge part of that frenzy comes from its electric ensemble cast. Ranveer Singh leads the charge with a intense screen presence, but the real muscle of the film comes from the mix of powerhouse performers around him Akshaye Khanna, Sanjay Dutt, R. Madhavan, Arjun Rampal and Sara Arjun Each actor adds a different flavour, and together they create that rare big-screen energy we associate with classic all-stops-out Hindi entertainers.
The action
From the first look of the film to the power-packed trailer, audiences have been introduced to carefully crafted action sequences that demonstrate the scale and precision of the stunts. Sources close to the production indicate that the film features complex set pieces and sequences designed with technical planning to ensure each moment stands out.
The music is thundering, addictive, festival-ready. The anthem “Ishq Jalakar – Kaarvan” is already blaring across speakers everywhere, the dance track “Shararat” has kicked off its own wave of reels, and “Gehra Hua” adds a surprising emotional shade to the album. Even the background score, teased in the trailer, has that adrenaline-soaked quality that can lift an action sequence from thrilling to unforgettable.
With
_Dhurandhar_, Aditya Dhar once again turns to the intersection of history and national security, but this time he uses the grammar of a big-budget action thriller to explore how Pakistan’s intelligence establishment imagines its long confrontation with India. The film’s trailer suggests that Dhar isn’t just staging a cross-border conflict; he’s trying to dramatise the worldview that has shaped decades of covert operations.
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