Originally posted by: Clochette
Not wanting to discuss your personal view, but with first a father, then his daughter working as spies/informants for the Indian RAW in Pakistan definitely belongs to a spy movie.
There is even resemblance with Dhurandhar through marrying someone who belongs to those one spies on (and then falling in love with that person).
The movie is even based on a true account of an Indian (female) agent (the Harinder Sikka novel Calling Sehmat) who had to marry the Pakistani officer to give info about military operations (prior to the 1971 war).
Not my personal views, the author of book has said the same
The problem is that in the book, Sahmet had a boyfriend in Delhi who waited for her to come back and when she did, she was pregnant, they loved each other so they lived together and her boyfriend raised that child with her
She loved India so much that she raised her son who joined Indian army unlike Alia's character from the movie who said she didn't want to be like one of them (Indian army and RAW)
The movie stripped Sahmet of her life away from the mission, Sahmet of book had a happy ending with the man she loved in Delhi, Sahmet of movie fell in love with Pakistani army man and was used to glorify an army which raped hundreds thousands of women, why are you overlooking gruesome reality?
What makes people not see the atrocities against women because they like specific men so much?
Raazi is opposite of Dhurandhar, Jaskirat loved his country, he faced alot of hardship in India but he never hated his country, he left his family because "Sacrifice is the highest duty", he loved Yalina and his child but he chose his love for his country over everyone
Edited by MsWhiskerson - 4 hours ago
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