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Uday Bhatia

Mint Lounge

Uday Bhatia is Film Editor with Mint Lounge in Mumbai. He was previously with Time Out Delhi and The Sunday Guardian. His work has appeared in GQ, The Caravan, Indian Quarterly and other publications.

All reviews by Uday Bhatia

Image of scene from the film Happy Patel: Khatarnak Jasoos

Happy Patel: Khatarnak Jasoos

Comedy, Action, Romance (Hindi)

Spy comedy gets by on whimsy and charm

Sat, January 17 2026

Vir Das directs and stars in this fish-out-of-water comedy about an incompetent spy in Goa

I wonder if Vir Das was a fan of Scrubs. So much in Happy Patel reminded me of Zach Braff’s sitcom: the cutaways and inserts, the sheer number of throwaway gags, the gravitation towards sweetness and light. This sort of busy, packed, self-aware comedy has a robust tradition in American film and TV. But we don’t see it much in India—which makes Happy Patel a bit of a curiosity, as foreign-returned as its protagonist.

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Image of scene from the film Freedom at Midnight S02

Freedom at Midnight S02

Drama, War & Politics (Hindi)

Historical series returns stronger and richer

Mon, January 12 2026

A fraught, exciting second season of Nikkhil Advani's ‘Freedom at Midnight’ looks back at the months before and after India's independence

In the third episode of Freedom At Midnight’s second season, Abhishek Banerjee turns up as an unnamed Hindu rioter. Towards the end, he confronts Gandhi (Chirag Vohra), who’s fasting in yet another attempt to end the terrible sectarian violence in Calcutta. He berates the frail old man, yelling at him to eat, confessing to murder, finally breaking down. Gandhi, barely able to speak, advises him to wipe his heart of hatred.

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Image of scene from the film Ikkis

Ikkis

History, War, Drama (Hindi)

A war film on a peace mission

Fri, January 2 2026

Madan Lal Khetarpal is in Lahore. He’s attending a college reunion and seeing the house where he grew up, but really, he’s building up courage to visit the place where his son Arun, second lieutenant in the Indian army, breathed his last in the 1971 War. This turned out to be Dharmendra’s final role, and he’s a little too old to offer an incisive performance. Yet, what we get is even better, something pure and unfiltered, an old man using his last fruitful moments to speak of love and understanding. I was incredibly moved, perhaps because my grandfather is also a Madan Lal who studied in Lahore and, like Dharmendra, has been a witness to both undivided Punjab and the entire sweep of independent India.

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Image of scene from the film Dhurandhar

Dhurandhar

Action, Thriller (Hindi)

Pakistan-set film offers sadism and expert bad vibes

Sat, December 6 2025

Aditya Dhar's ‘Dhurandhar’ places an Indian spy in a Karachi gang war. It's an engrossing, toxic piece of cinema

The last thing we hear in Dhurandhar is: Yeh naya Hindustan hai. Yeh ghar mein ghusega bhi, aur maarega bhi — this is the new India. It’ll break into your home, and kill you too. It’s a callback to Aditya Dhar’s previous film, Uri: The Surgical Strike, also about an Indian operation conducted on Pakistani soil. The word ‘ghusna’, with its connotations of an initial breach, feels more appropriate for the 2019 film, which ventures a few miles across the border for a short while. Dhurandhar, on the other hand, barely steps out of Karachi after setting down its bags there in the first half hour. The film is so immersed in Pakistan that India becomes a blip on TV screens.

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Image of scene from the film Tere Ishk Mein

Tere Ishk Mein

Romance, Drama, Action (Hindi)

An angry, self-pitying slog

Sat, November 29 2025

Anand L Rai's film, starring Dhanush and Kriti Sanon, plays like an apologia for misunderstood men in unrequited love

Mukti’s stalker has just turned up at her engagement party and thrown Molotov cocktails. She responds by hugging and trying to reason with him. He blames her for everything, threatens to kill her, kill himself, suggests the two of them die by suicide. When he’s finally dragged off by the police, she breaks down in the arms of her fiancé, tells him their tortured history. What manner of comfort might Jassi offer his future wife? The first thing he says is, “Shouldn’t you apologize to him?"

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Image of scene from the film 120 Bahadur

120 Bahadur

Action, War (Hindi)

Indo-China war film has a surprisingly soft edge

Fri, November 21 2025

Razneesh Ghai's ‘120 Bahadur’, starring Farhan Akhtar, is a square but emotional retelling of the Battle of Rezang La

Partly by choice, partly through circumstance, 120 Bahadur is out of sync with the times. Razneesh Ghai’s film, about a famous battle in the Sino-Indian war of 1962, chooses to be stirring, even square. Most Hindi war films adopt a very different tone now. Some viewers might be reminded of the wholesomeness of Lakshya, directed by Farhan Akhtar, 120 Bahadur’s lead actor. That film was made 21 years ago but it may as well be 40 considering how little it has in common with hard, cynical, triumphant films like Uri and Shershaah and Fighter.

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Image of scene from the film De De Pyaar De 2

De De Pyaar De 2

Comedy, Romance (Hindi)

Anshul Sharma's sequel is hit and miss comedy

Sun, November 16 2025

Ajay Devgn brings down the tempo in this occasionally funny but thin and unambitious comedy

Ajay Devgn used to throw himself into comedies. I never thought he was a great comic (compare his effortful style to the ease of Akshay Kumar), but he more or less got the job done. But now, as with every other facet of his acting, Devgn’s comedy has lost its edge. In De De Pyaar De 2, he’s a beat behind everyone else, draining the energy in scenes when he should be cranking it up.

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Image of scene from the film Haq

Haq

Drama (Hindi)

Film on the Shah Bano case dances around a thorny issue

Sat, November 8 2025

‘Haq’, starring Yami Gautam and Emraan Hashmi, is a restrained retelling of the Shah Bano story that only hints at its implications for today's India

There’s a scene in “Dhoom Dhaam” (2025) where Yami Gautam’s character goes off on a rant about patriarchy. It felt to me a moment written for the express purpose of being able to share on social media as a ‘mic-drop monologue’—which is exactly what Netflix did a few days after the release. I was reminded of this by a scene in Haq , where Gautam’s Shazia Bano, accosted in the marketplace, exhorts onlooking women to really read the Quran and not submit meekly to their husbands. Another mic-drop, I guess, but one complicated by the subject, the times, and the actor.

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Image of scene from the film Happy Patel: Khatarnak Jasoos
FCG Rating for the film Happy Patel: Khatarnak Jasoos: 47/100
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Image of scene from the film Parasakthi
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Image of scene from the film Taskaree: The Smuggler's Web
FCG Rating for the film Taskaree: The Smuggler's Web: 48/100
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Crime, Mystery, Drama (Hindi)

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Image of scene from the film Vaa Vaathiyaar
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