Starcast: Kartik Aaryan, Amruta Shubhash, Mrunal Thakur, Vikas Kumar, Vishwajeet Pradhan

Director: Ram Madhvani

Watch or Not? Give it a try for Kartik Aaryan without looking forward to something extraordinary.

A mentally messed-up Radio Jockey, Arjun Pathak (Kartik Aaryan) who simply is shown after a tune so as to chuckle-out-loud at how unmarried you are. The track is Kasoor and the purpose why it makes sense of being single is that it is a flashback montage of Arjun dwelling his happy existence together with his spouse Saumya (Mrunal Thakur). He is now sitting in his workplace with divorce papers in hand and receives a call giving hints approximately a bomb blast on Bandra Worli Sea Link.

He ignores the call and sees a portion of Mumbai’s 1600-crore ‘Golden Gate’ bridge getting erupted through a blast. Arjun gets the call again which he then makes use of to get the top spot back on TV. But he does not realized what is ahead of him or in store for him.

The principal problem Dhamaka faces is the template it chooses to execute. Forget international, Bollywood has given us toll many films following a comparable path, a few superb ones (A Wednesday, Table No. 21), a few suitable to pretty much respectable (Madaari, Knock Out), and some bleh (The Killer). Yes, all of these aren’t exactly much like every one is different but the fundamental sub-plot of those movies is set where the antagonist forcing the protagonist to do tasks on the gunpoint.

Now that we’re clear how they are associated with each other, in case you see the good ones from the above list they all had one element which was same. Movies like A Wednesday & Table No 21 had an excellent balance of terrible and suitable in them. Dhamaka misses that, the ‘terrible’ is so average that irrespective of how impeccable the ‘suitable’ is, it simply remains unexploded throughout. Haven’t seen the original (The Terror Live) so let’s now not draw any parallels.

This is excellent for the actor, but not so good for the film because of the antagonist's lack of connection to Kartik's plight. Aaryan's office window or a television screen were used to display the bomb detonation, reducing the total impact. A single room was all that Manu Anand's cinematography needed to capture the lead. It's difficult to avoid repetition while filming in a single location, yet Anand manages to keep your interest with some slow-mo, BGM-heavy passages, only to be shattered by the film's lesser parts.