Prakash Raj Takes Aim at Dhurandhar 2, Mocks Celebrities Praising the Film
Actor Prakash Raj has taken a dig at Aditya Dhar’s Dhurandhar: The Revenge (Dhurandhar 2) and the celebrities applauding it, including Allu Arjun, Vijay Deverakonda, Jr NTR, and Mahesh Babu.
Responding to a tweet highlighting the South stars’ praise, Prakash wrote on X (formerly Twitter), “Signs of Obligations are spreading South too .. #justasking.” He also shared a clip of the classic song Abhi Na Jaao Chhod Kar from Hum Dono (1961), adding, “Me .. Bahut door (very far) from #Dhurandhar ….are you #justasking.”
Celebrities’ praise for Dhurandhar 2
Despite Prakash Raj’s remarks, the film has drawn glowing reviews from several stars:
Mahesh Babu: “#DhurandharTheRevenge is an explosion executed with perfect precision! The finest version of Ranveer unleashed… Standing ovation-worthy experience… Congratulations to the entire team.”
Jr NTR: Highlighted the film’s direction, performances, and music, calling it “a film that rouses your emotions and stays with you long after the end credits roll.”
Vijay Deverakonda: “Tomorrow onwards—something big is going to happen in Indian cinema and culture… Immense love and respect to the entire cast and crew.”
Allu Arjun: “Patriotism with swag. A film that will make every patriot proud… Technical brilliance… Show Rocker. An Indian story… International swag! Jai Hind.”
About Dhurandhar: The Revenge
The spy action thriller, directed by Aditya Dhar and produced by Jyoti Deshpande and Lokesh Dhar, released worldwide on March 19 in five languages: Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, and Kannada.
The film stars Ranveer Singh in dual roles as Jaskirat Singh Rangi and Hamza Ali Mazari, with R Madhavan as strategist Ajay Sanyal, Arjun Rampal as ISI Major Iqbal, and Sanjay Dutt as SP Chaudhary Aslam. Supporting cast includes Sara Arjun, Rakesh Bedi, Danish Pandor, and Gaurav Gera.
While the first Dhurandhar focused on covert operations in Lyari, Karachi, the sequel charts Hamza’s rise in the underworld and traces his origins as Jaskirat Singh Rangi, exploring his journey to becoming a covert operative.
Prakash Raj’s critique adds to the conversation around the film, contrasting with the strong celebrity endorsements and commercial success it has achieved.
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