The voiceover for Code Name: Tiranga is provided by Parineeti Chopra. You'll grow impatient reading the screenplay that follows. We were thrilled when Code Name: Tiranga was first revealed because it was another spy thriller with an actress in the lead role. The movie, however, is neither exciting nor enjoyable and will just make you drowsy. Consider it a different dhaakad that no one requested. Tiranga has nothing fresh to give, according to code.

The plot follows Durga, played by Parineeti Chopra, on a covert mission to Afghanistan. She bumps into ali Mirza, who is portrayed by Harrdy Sandhu, as they ride together in a cab. The plot of the movie jumps to their love story over a song. Durga is really an undercover police officer who was assigned by raw to eliminate Khalid Omar (Sharad Kelkar) when he stormed the indian Parliament in 2002. ali is assisting her in reaching him. She is forced to choose between her love and her country much later.

Parineeti Chopra made a sort of comeback in Bollywood, but did she actually return? Code Name: Tiranga had the potential to give her so much more, but all she got were a few enjoyable action scenes. It's one of those movies where you think, "Maybe the first half is boring, but the second half will pick up pace." However, Code Name: Tiranga doesn't continue at all after the intermission. It appears like the filmmakers were hurried to complete the movie because they frequently kept skipping and moving sequences. You wish there was a fast-forward button because some sequences even go on for fifteen minutes. Here, Ribhu's shoddy direction is to blame.

Although the dialogues were boring, the absence of rationale was more worse! Durga is on the phone and is unaware that Omar and his five automobiles are pursuing her. This is just one illustration of the issues with the movie. The terrorist in Code Name: Tiranga keeps his own photo as the background of his phone when he leaves it behind. A movie about the research and analysis wing (RAW), the nation's smartest organisation, has practically no research behind it! The climax scene is directly taken from PubG. Excellent camerawork by Tribhuvan Babu Sadineni is what keeps the movie from failing.

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