There was no icon status. No charm. No romance. Just fear.
Pakistani critics flagged clear inaccuracies: over-glorification of a ruthless killer, Lyari portrayed as a pure terror hub, cultural absurdities like characters constantly saying “Adaab” (no one in Karachi does), and the fantasy of Indian intelligence freely infiltrating and recruiting deep inside Lyari.
Counter-facts are often cited for a reason: Uzair Baloch later exposed and dismantled separatist cells and aided in Kulbhushan Jadhav’s arrest—directly contradicting the film’s ISI-gangster-terror nexus.
The Legal Shadow: Fiction vs Exploitation
The family of late Major Mohit Sharma (Ashoka Chakra) petitioned the Delhi High Court, alleging the film borrows from real undercover operations without consent or credit. The filmmakers insist the story is fictional. The court did not halt release.
But the question lingers: where does inspiration end and exploitation begin?
Nabil Gabool, complained that it didn’t capture his real “dabangg” (fearless/daring) persona:
Mera role bahot dabangg tha… inhone mere role ko sahi tareeke se nahi dikhaya.
For an industry that leans heavily on “based on true events” while dodging accountability, this case matters.
