The movie that is truly living up to its name is "Brahmastra." Nothing is interfering with its consistent box office performance. It is well known that the Boycott bollywood craze, which destroyed Aamir Khan's "Laal Singh Chaddha" and Akshay Kumar's "Raksha Bandhan," was at its height in India. However, "Brahmastra" was now exempt from these boycott activities.
The movie is performing well across the board and overcame the $100 million milestone over the weekend. The movie received a lot of negative reviews, yet none of them had an impact on sales. From kashmir to Kanyakumari, the young audience has been supporting this movie, ignoring critic critiques and boycott activities. According to reports, the mention of weaponry from Hindu mythology generally made a difference.
Brahmastra, which finally hit theatres this past weekend after being delayed for eight years straight, is a torturous theatrical performance that may break both your eardrums and your will to live. The Last Airbender, the MCU, Harry Potter, and other well-known works are all routinely plagiarised in this overlong, confusingly planned film, which seems to have convinced itself that no one would notice. ayan mukerji actually feels the need to spoon-feed every last bit of exposition so loudly that by the time you're leaving the theatre, bewildered stupid, you'll be thinking to yourself in Sanskrit. This is because he has such little respect for the audience (and such little faith in his own picture).