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Posts with something drastic should be labeled NSFW and flaired it as “Injury” or it may be deleted. Posts that feature death or grievous injuries are not permitted. People intentionally playing a stupid game and winning a stupid prize does not count, nor do prank videos, skits, or dumb stuff by small children. Videos must include the stupid game and the stupid prize. Rule 1: Win a Stupid Prize for Playing a Stupid GameĪll videos should feature a human doing something that an outside observer would say “hey, that’s a bad idea” and then suffering the consequences. All posts must involve someone knowingly doing something stupid and winning a prize for their stupidity. “Do me proud.This is a sub dedicated to animated gifs and videos of people playing stupid games and winning stupid prizes. Sachin’s expression in the scene is to die for. Rahul says he’s changing his ways, that the future is looking bright. Receiving his son after a hard day’s work, his hunched shoulders drop even further. My favourite, by far, is Sachin Khedekar as Rahul’s father. Upendra Limaye, who was the cop in Mulshi Pattern, is now a gangster - says something about Bollywood remakes - and Jissu Sengupta’s tapodi accent never leaves Tollygunj. The ensuing tension leaves little room for anyone else. Salman, of course, knows this, and has to deliberately subordinate himself in scenes (it doesn’t work-since Manjrekar knows he’s making a Salman Khan film and has to at least deliver the goods). This is his show, sprinting and snickering and shooting enemies in the chest.
He indulges Rahul throughout, giving us a villain to root for (Vaastav, Manjrekar’s first Hindi film, never tipped that way).Īayush cuts an odd figure between Jesse Pinkman and a young Sanjay Dutt. Yet Manjrekar isn’t quite interested in a character study. Its primary focus is Rahul, whose descent into crime and hedonism is held against the humble appeals of his father. The film is concerned with big themes-land-grabbing, the abuse and exploitation of farmers in Maharashtra-but also plays as a bro-on-bro deathmatch. What is originally a gritty gangster story is dressed up as campy Bollywood fare. “Oye tu fikar na kar” lands as flatly as “humare haath bandhe hue hai (our hands are tied)”.Īntim is a remake of the 2018 Marathi hit Mulshi Pattern, with the cop character played up. He slips from Hindi to Punjabi without the slightest change in texture or pitch. As for his accent, that’s just asking too much. What’s more touching, though, is his decision to swap out the bracelet, ditching it for a sharp, shiny kara. In Antim, he gets to try on red, blue and khaki variants. The actor had last draped a turban in Heroes (2008), mostly in military green. It materializes in the form of Rajveer, a Sikh cop played by Salman. That’s a title screaming out for a comeback. “With sweet dish.” So he falls in with gangsters, gladly – and gleefully – killing a few to become the Bhai of Pune. “I’ll eat the whole thali,” he announces proudly. This is not a life Rahul sees for himself, subsisting on crumbs and letting middlemen and thugs push them around.
There, his father takes up hard manual work at the city’s Market Yard. Aayush plays Rahul, a violent village boy who migrates to Pune with his family.