Review of the movie Bawaal: A Chaotic Mess That Stays True To Its Title With Stars Varun Dhawan and Janhvi Kapoor!


ZNMD inspired us to travel to Spain because Europe depicted in this film makes you never want to visit!


What's Good: It will air on OTT, along with a sincere Varun Dhawan!

What's Bad: The attempt to do something new that ends up trapping you and including one of the craziest subplots you've ever seen!

If You Need to Go, Go Anywhere!

When using a friend's free Amazon Prime account and having meaningless time to kill, you should just watch.


Indian: language


When our hero Ajay urf Ajju Bhaiya (Varun Dhawan) enters the scene, which was previously black and white and playing depressing music, it transforms into a vibrant, upbeat setting. Ajju is a teacher who believes that "image is everything, everything is image," which is revealed after the producers waste the first five minutes of the film asking the viewers to guess what his profession is. He is married to Nisha, who before they were wed told Ajju about a medical condition she was dealing with (which I won't reveal!).

However, Ajju, being the self-conscious jerk that he is, isolates himself from Nisha only to find himself travelling to Europe with her. What brings them to Europe? Well, that's something even the director Nitesh Tiwari didn't care to consider much, so let's ignore this and just guess how they'd fall in love during this trip, saving the marriage in the process since that's what we do in Bollywood movies—we add a few Arijit Singh songs.


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Review of the script for the film Bawaal

In order to create the weakest movie of their careers, Nitesh continues to develop the stories with his seasoned collaborators Piyush Gupta, Nikhil Mehrotra, and Shreyas Jain. While building the crucial subplots of the movie, this one maintains its integrity, it only lacks the necessary brainpower. Characters make some absurd choices that only serve to divert the movie's attention away from its occasionally powerful emotional core.

Even while this movie has some really funny moments, there aren't enough of them to counteract the 'Bawaal' that the narrative and screenplay produce. Humour has always been a strong retention point in Tiwari's prior films. The flaws are obvious and numerous, including a middle-class teacher spending 8–10 lakhs to travel to Europe only to surpass an angry slap painted on a politician's son's face, equating the desire for more with Hitler's desire to rule the world, placing the reader in the middle of the tragic World War II episodes while contrasting it with the current chaos in real life that is based on a flawed narrative, and much more.

In the past, Mitesh Mirchandani (Uri, Neerja) has produced some reliable work, and he makes an effort to do the same here. Yes, the movie presents one of the most uninteresting images of Europe, and you'll feel like ZNMD in reverse, never wishing to travel there again. No, it's because of the dark design used to display the beautiful landscapes, not because of the images of war it depicts.


Review of the Motion Picture Bawaal: Star Performance

Varun Dhawan expertly inhabits the role of Ajju, utilising charm to forge a love-hate bond with him due to specific characteristics he possesses. The transition from cocky to hilarious to catastrophic comes off as quite natural and pretentious.

In one scene, Janhvi Kapoor is described as independent, yet the next scene ends with her getting married because "how would she get a good guy given her medical condition?" Janhvi Kapoor suffers from superficial character characterization. Even with all of her weaknesses, Janhvi still manages to shine in a few sequences, demonstrating why I've always been right to back her rather than Sara Ali Khan.

Manoj Pahwa is broke, therefore if he agrees to do this just to pay his bills, that's entirely acceptable. I initially mistook the Gujarati fellow traveller Vyas Hemang for Kumar Varun, who is a pleasant surprise. He is given the opportunity to add some minor details by Prateek Pachori's Bipin, who makes an effort to be Janna to Dhawan's Wiki, along with some significant humorous heavy lifting. With his inclusion in the movie, Mukesh Tiwari doesn't add anything.


Review of the film Bawaal: Direction and Music

Nitesh Tiwari commits the same mistake he did with Aamir and Fatima in Dangal and Sushant and his son in Chhichhore, but this time it's different. Without creating a solid connection between them, he blends gloomy depictions of war with the problems that his characters are facing in real life. You are caught between two worlds like a fool, unsure of how to feel about Varun and Janhvi as they learn from their mistakes or about yourself for putting yourself in a position where you must witness this.

Only the former's Tumhe Kitna Pyaar Karte, performed by Arijit Singh, will be heard again from this group of three songs by Mithoon, Tanishk Bagchi, and Akashdeep Sengupta. The background check on Daniel B. George pretty much passes muster in all the important categories.


The Last Word in the Bawaal Movie Review

All things considered, Bawaal has certain factors working in its favour, but many of them are working against it. This shows why the producers' choice to release the film directly to OTT was the best one they could have made.


On July 21st, 2023, Bawaal comes out.

Describe your Bawaal viewing experience for us.


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