
Aa Gaya Hero
- Director
- Dipankar SenapatiDinesh Chand MeenaDipankar Senapati , Dinesh Chand Meena
- Studio
- FilmsMangal Tara T.VMangal Tara T.V & Films
- Release Date
- 16 March 2017
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹8.50 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹1.39 Cr
Review
Govind Pandey's "Aa Gaya Hero" is a limp, forgettable exercise in lazy storytelling that mistakes exposition for plot. Sunny Deol, playing cop Ravindra Varma, goes through the motions with all the enthusiasm of someone reading a phone directory—no charisma, no conviction, just a tired action star collecting a paycheck. The narrative about uncovering ministerial corruption and terrorist networks sounds promising on paper, but the execution is so pedestrian that you'll lose interest within twenty minutes. The supporting cast of corrupt ministers and hired goons are cardboard cutouts, delivering dialogue with all the nuance of a bad PowerPoint presentation. There's no tension, no character development, and certainly no reason to care whether this "hero" succeeds or fails.
What's particularly frustrating is how the film squanders its own premise. A story about systemic corruption and an honest cop fighting the system could have been compelling—instead, we get a series of disconnected action sequences strung together by the thinnest of plots. The direction lacks any visual flair or storytelling intelligence; scenes plod along without building momentum, and the climactic confrontation arrives not with a bang but with a whimper. Even the action choreography feels phoned in, lacking the kinetic energy required to salvage such weak material. This is the kind of film that disappears the moment you leave the theater, leaving barely a trace in your memory.
Rating: 4/10
Storyline
So basically, this movie follows this super brave cop named Ravindra Varma who's determined to track down a dangerous terrorist causing all kinds of trouble. What makes things interesting is that as he digs deeper into his investigation, he uncovers this whole corrupt network that goes way beyond just catching one bad guy.
It turns out there are these two shady ministers who are secretly working with the terrorist, and they've got backup from two brothers who basically do their dirty work. So now our hero cop has to figure out how to take down this entire criminal operation that's protected by people in power.
The big question the whole movie builds toward is whether Ravindra has what it takes to actually expose all these corrupt guys and bring them to justice, despite them having so much influence and power. It's basically an action-packed story about one honest cop fighting against a web of corruption and crime.




