Dhurandhar 2 Review: Ranveer Singh Is Unstoppable, Arjun Rampal Steals the Show — But Where Was Akshaye Khanna?
Digital Desk
Dhurandhar 2 opens to Rs 236 crore worldwide on Day 1. Ranveer Singh delivers career best but Akshaye Khanna's absence hurts. Full review here.
The sequel that India was waiting for has arrived. It is bigger, bloodier and bolder. But one absence cuts deeper than any action sequence.
Dhurandhar: The Revenge — directed by Aditya Dhar and released on March 19, 2026 — is not just a sequel. It is a statement. The first part grossed over Rs 1,300 crore worldwide and became the highest-grossing Hindi film in India's domestic history. The second part has opened with a Rs 236.63 crore worldwide gross on Day 1 alone, beating every Hindi film before it — Jawan, Pathaan, every record — to become the biggest opening day in Bollywood history. Industry analysts are now saying Aamir Khan's Dangal's nine-year record of Rs 2,000 crore all-time gross is genuinely under threat.
Ranveer Singh — Superstar Mode Fully Unlocked
If Part 1 was Akshaye Khanna's film — where Ranveer played second fiddle to a towering villain — Part 2 is entirely Ranveer Singh's universe. As Jaskirat Singh Rangi transforming into the feared Hamza Ali Mazari — covert Indian intelligence agent operating deep inside Karachi's criminal and political underworld — Ranveer goes to places most actors simply cannot follow. The silent gaze. The bloodthirsty eyes in the climax. The emotionally charged moments of vulnerability when Jaskirat's loneliness surfaces. Taran Adarsh called it career-defining. Koimoi said you fall in love with him all over again. DNA India says he will be the biggest superstar of 2026 and a genuine threat to the Khans. Every frame he inhabits — he owns.
The runtime is 235 minutes — nearly four hours — and not a minute feels wasted.
Arjun Rampal — The Scene Stealer Nobody Saw Coming
In a film full of powerhouse performances — the actor generating the most electricity is Arjun Rampal as Major Iqbal. Cold. Calculated. Menacing. He enters the second half and takes complete ownership of the narrative. His ten-minute confrontation with his father is being called the single most powerful scene in the film — a masterclass in restraint that builds into an explosion. His eventual face-off with Ranveer Singh is already being called the best villain-hero clash in recent Bollywood memory. As veteran critic Shobhaa De noted — Arjun Rampal chewed up the screen in ways that reminded audiences why this actor, when given the right material, is genuinely exceptional.
The Supporting Cast — Solid All Around
Sanjay Dutt as SSP Chaudhary Aslam dominates the first half as the primary antagonist before giving way to Rampal in the second. His cartoonish menace is exactly what the role demands and he delivers it with full commitment. R Madhavan as IB Director Ajay Sanyal is a beauty — precise, authoritative and deeply watchable even with limited screen time. Sara Arjun has substantially more to do this time — she is not just a supporting presence but a full character with emotional stakes. Rakesh Bedi as politician Jameel Jamali is the film's biggest surprise — a performance of cunning vulnerability that the audience never saw coming. Danish Pandor as Uzair Baloch brings a terrifying physicality to a role that includes some of the film's most disturbing sequences. Allu Arjun, Vijay Deverakonda and Preity Zinta all praised the film publicly after screenings — with Preity summing it up simply — revenge ho toh Dhurandhar jaisa ho, warna na ho.
The One Wound the Film Cannot Heal — Akshaye Khanna
Here is the painful truth. Part 1 was great because of Ranveer Singh and because Akshaye Khanna's Rehman Dakait was one of the finest villain performances in Indian cinema history. Cold, charming, terrifying and ultimately human — Khanna elevated every scene he was in. In Part 2 — Rehman Dakait is dead. And his absence creates a void that even Arjun Rampal's excellent work cannot entirely fill. As Shobhaa De observed — Akshaye Khanna was so missed. The film acknowledges this — it builds its entire opening around the aftermath of Rehman's death — but no acknowledgement can substitute for the real thing. Aditya Dhar is a smart enough filmmaker to know this, and the film works despite that loss. But it never quite reaches the emotional heights of Part 1 because of it.
The Controversy — Propaganda or Patriotism?
Dhurandhar 2 has reignited the debate that followed Part 1. Is it patriotic cinema or state-sponsored propaganda? Rakesh Bedi, speaking to NDTV, refused to accept the propaganda label — saying everyone has the right to like or dislike a film but putting it in a category is unfair. The film draws heavily from real events — the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, ISI operations, the Baloch underworld — and blends them with fiction in ways that are deliberately designed to generate strong emotional responses. Some will call it dangerous. Most audiences simply call it cinema.
Verdict
Dhurandhar: The Revenge is a blockbuster by every definition. Ranveer Singh delivers the performance of his career. Arjun Rampal reminds India what it has been missing. Aditya Dhar delivers a sequel that is bigger, sharper and more brutal than its predecessor. The absence of Akshaye Khanna is the only scar on an otherwise extraordinary achievement. See it on the biggest screen you can find.
Dhurandhar 2 Review: Ranveer Singh Is Unstoppable, Arjun Rampal Steals the Show — But Where Was Akshaye Khanna?
Digital Desk
The sequel that India was waiting for has arrived. It is bigger, bloodier and bolder. But one absence cuts deeper than any action sequence.
Dhurandhar: The Revenge — directed by Aditya Dhar and released on March 19, 2026 — is not just a sequel. It is a statement. The first part grossed over Rs 1,300 crore worldwide and became the highest-grossing Hindi film in India's domestic history. The second part has opened with a Rs 236.63 crore worldwide gross on Day 1 alone, beating every Hindi film before it — Jawan, Pathaan, every record — to become the biggest opening day in Bollywood history. Industry analysts are now saying Aamir Khan's Dangal's nine-year record of Rs 2,000 crore all-time gross is genuinely under threat.
Ranveer Singh — Superstar Mode Fully Unlocked
If Part 1 was Akshaye Khanna's film — where Ranveer played second fiddle to a towering villain — Part 2 is entirely Ranveer Singh's universe. As Jaskirat Singh Rangi transforming into the feared Hamza Ali Mazari — covert Indian intelligence agent operating deep inside Karachi's criminal and political underworld — Ranveer goes to places most actors simply cannot follow. The silent gaze. The bloodthirsty eyes in the climax. The emotionally charged moments of vulnerability when Jaskirat's loneliness surfaces. Taran Adarsh called it career-defining. Koimoi said you fall in love with him all over again. DNA India says he will be the biggest superstar of 2026 and a genuine threat to the Khans. Every frame he inhabits — he owns.
The runtime is 235 minutes — nearly four hours — and not a minute feels wasted.
Arjun Rampal — The Scene Stealer Nobody Saw Coming
In a film full of powerhouse performances — the actor generating the most electricity is Arjun Rampal as Major Iqbal. Cold. Calculated. Menacing. He enters the second half and takes complete ownership of the narrative. His ten-minute confrontation with his father is being called the single most powerful scene in the film — a masterclass in restraint that builds into an explosion. His eventual face-off with Ranveer Singh is already being called the best villain-hero clash in recent Bollywood memory. As veteran critic Shobhaa De noted — Arjun Rampal chewed up the screen in ways that reminded audiences why this actor, when given the right material, is genuinely exceptional.
The Supporting Cast — Solid All Around
Sanjay Dutt as SSP Chaudhary Aslam dominates the first half as the primary antagonist before giving way to Rampal in the second. His cartoonish menace is exactly what the role demands and he delivers it with full commitment. R Madhavan as IB Director Ajay Sanyal is a beauty — precise, authoritative and deeply watchable even with limited screen time. Sara Arjun has substantially more to do this time — she is not just a supporting presence but a full character with emotional stakes. Rakesh Bedi as politician Jameel Jamali is the film's biggest surprise — a performance of cunning vulnerability that the audience never saw coming. Danish Pandor as Uzair Baloch brings a terrifying physicality to a role that includes some of the film's most disturbing sequences. Allu Arjun, Vijay Deverakonda and Preity Zinta all praised the film publicly after screenings — with Preity summing it up simply — revenge ho toh Dhurandhar jaisa ho, warna na ho.
The One Wound the Film Cannot Heal — Akshaye Khanna
Here is the painful truth. Part 1 was great because of Ranveer Singh and because Akshaye Khanna's Rehman Dakait was one of the finest villain performances in Indian cinema history. Cold, charming, terrifying and ultimately human — Khanna elevated every scene he was in. In Part 2 — Rehman Dakait is dead. And his absence creates a void that even Arjun Rampal's excellent work cannot entirely fill. As Shobhaa De observed — Akshaye Khanna was so missed. The film acknowledges this — it builds its entire opening around the aftermath of Rehman's death — but no acknowledgement can substitute for the real thing. Aditya Dhar is a smart enough filmmaker to know this, and the film works despite that loss. But it never quite reaches the emotional heights of Part 1 because of it.
The Controversy — Propaganda or Patriotism?
Dhurandhar 2 has reignited the debate that followed Part 1. Is it patriotic cinema or state-sponsored propaganda? Rakesh Bedi, speaking to NDTV, refused to accept the propaganda label — saying everyone has the right to like or dislike a film but putting it in a category is unfair. The film draws heavily from real events — the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, ISI operations, the Baloch underworld — and blends them with fiction in ways that are deliberately designed to generate strong emotional responses. Some will call it dangerous. Most audiences simply call it cinema.
Verdict
Dhurandhar: The Revenge is a blockbuster by every definition. Ranveer Singh delivers the performance of his career. Arjun Rampal reminds India what it has been missing. Aditya Dhar delivers a sequel that is bigger, sharper and more brutal than its predecessor. The absence of Akshaye Khanna is the only scar on an otherwise extraordinary achievement. See it on the biggest screen you can find.