Cameraman Caught Red-Handed in Dhurandhar The Revenge – See Yourself
- The unforgivable cameraman fiasco. A visible crew member with equipment? In a high-stakes revenge thriller? That’s not “realism” – that’s amateur-hour negligence screaming from the screen. Fans are dying laughing, but the immersion? Dead on arrival.
- Editing that ruins the rhythm. Sharp cuts? Forget it. Scenes drag, transitions feel clunky, and momentum dies faster than a villain’s monologue. What should’ve been pulse-pounding now plays like a rough assembly cut.
- Music choices that make you mute. Over-the-top scores clash with the tone, drowning out the tension instead of amplifying it. Heavenly action beats get buried under mismatched tracks that feel phoned in from a 2005 item song.
- Stretched middle episodes that test your soul. The bloated filler between Chapter 1’s brilliance and the explosive Dhurandhar climax? Pure torture. Hours of padding that kill pacing and leave audiences checking their watches.
Look, Chapter 1 hits like lightning and that climax block – especially the Dhurandhar chapter – is genuinely heavenly, delivering raw revenge thrills that stick. But these sloppy technical sins are the weakest link, turning potential legend status into “so close, yet so embarrassing.” The team had fire in the story… they just forgot to fix the basics. Will a director’s cut save it, or is this the revenge that backfired hardest? Fans are already voting with their rage tweets.