
Heropanti 2
- Director
- Ahmed Khan
- Studio
- Nadiadwala Grandson Entertainment
- Release Date
- 29 April 2022
- Running Time
- 142 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹70.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹35.13 Cr
Cast
Review
Adi Shuker's "Heropanti 2" attempts to straddle the line between tech-thriller and romantic drama, but ends up falling awkwardly between both stools. The premise—a reformed hacker hiding in plain sight, caught between his past and an unexpected connection—has genuine potential, yet the execution feels scattered and often labored. Tiger Shroff delivers a serviceable performance, bringing his usual physical intensity to the role, though the emotional complexity required to portray Babloo's moral reckoning largely eludes him. Tara Sutaria tries earnestly as Inaaya, but the chemistry between the leads struggles to ignite in a way that would make their central romance feel earned rather than imposed by screenplay necessity. The film's identity crisis is its greatest weakness: it cannot decide whether it wants to be a slick cyber-crime narrative or a redemption love story, and in trying to be both, it masters neither.
What does work, sporadically, is the film's willingness to engage with genuine stakes—the subplot involving the ambulance driver's tragedy hints at a darker, more purposeful narrative that occasionally breaks through the conventional Bollywood veneer. Shroff's action sequences are competently choreographed, though they feel increasingly obligatory in a story that should rely more on tension and intrigue. Director Shuker, whose previous work averages around 6.5 out of 10, hasn't quite found the voice needed to elevate this material. The pacing drags in the middle acts
Storyline
So basically, there's this guy RJ who's just trying to live a normal life in Yorkshire, working as a bouncer and taking care of his mom. One day he bumps into this super successful businesswoman named Inaaya who's convinced he's actually her ex-boyfriend from way back. He has no clue what she's talking about, but it turns out she might actually be onto something—RJ isn't who he claims to be.
Here's where it gets wild: this guy's real identity is Babloo, a former hacker who got caught up helping a corrupt police officer take down a dangerous cyber-criminal mastermind named Laila. The plan was for Babloo to get close to Laila by romancing Inaaya, Laila's sister, so he could help take down their whole operation from the inside. But money and power started getting to him, and he lost sight of what really mattered.
Everything changes when Babloo realizes how many innocent people are getting destroyed by Laila's schemes—people like an ambulance driver who lost everything to the hacking app and ended up taking his own life. That reality check hits Babloo hard, and he decides to do the right thing, turning his back on the easy money and betrayal. He basically disappears and creates this whole new life as RJ with his adoptive mom, hoping nobody would ever find him. Of course, that's about to get seriously complicated when Laila figures out where he's hiding.