If it wasn't so violent, there would have been a few unintended laughs in Baaghi 4, but this one has not a shred of humour amidst the nonstop mayhem, observes Deepa Gahlot.
After back to back disappointments of Bade Miyan Chote Miyan, Ganapath and Heropanti, Tiger Shroff now has a film which has opened reasonably well at the box office.
Directed by A Harsha and produced by Sajid Nadiadwala, Baaghi 4 releases on September 5.
2025 was disappointing, when it came to some big budget, hyped movies, which failed to do expected business.
'It's tough to constantly reinvent myself but with Baaghi 4, I'm confident that I've attempted a different perspective to action.'
Harnaaz Kaur Sandhu is in her full glam era and honestly, no one's complaining.
They Call Him OG topped the gross domestic box office collection with Rs 224 crore (Rs 2.24 billion).
'Whenever offers came my way, it always felt like people in Hindi cinema hadn't really seen my Punjabi work.'
This Diwali will not see the three Khans or Akshay Kumar, Ajay Devgn or Hrithik Roshan bringing their films to the marquee, as is usually the norm. Even Ranbir Kapoor, Kartik Aaryan and Ranveer Singh will not treat us to a movie release.
September is going to be an exciting month in theatres.
After the disappointment of War 2, there was some respite this weekend as Param Sundari managed to have a decent opening at the box office.
Kalki gets honoured in London... Sanjana starts journaling... Ishaan's no-shave month...
The biggest releases of 2025 will actually start arriving in theatres from the Independence Day weekend.
'One of the most significant factors contributing to the optimism for 2025 is the lineup of films featuring Bollywood's three superstar Khans.'
Amazon Prime Video has announced 69 assorted Web series and movies, and the slate sure looks interesting.
Plans are on at Yash Raj Films to revive the franchise and also wake up the 'dead' character that Tiger played in the film.
'It would have been easy to make a small film with Tiger in a basti or an action film like Pushpa which was all mud, grunge and a repeat of what I had done before.'