The story of a merciless guy is told in BADASS ravi KUMAR. 1989 is the year. A fierce police officer from delhi who is committed to eradicating corruption is ravi Kumar (Himesh Reshammiya). In the process, he enforces the law himself and even gets rid of dishonest individuals. He has been suspended as a result. In Oman, Syed Bashir, a high-ranking official from Pakistan, requests assistance from Pedro (Prabhu Dheva), the most powerful man in the world, in retrieving a film camera reel. It includes images of a dossier that has details about all of India's secret spies, their aliases, and the locations of its lethal missiles. Pedro begins working on it, but because of unforeseen circumstances, a specific laila retrieves the reel.

Pedro is informed by laila that, in exchange for a fee, she will personally deliver the reel to him in Muscat. Commissioner Awasthi (Saurabh Sachdeva) learns about Pedro and his indian partner Jagawar (Rajesh Sharma) from Interpol agent Mahavir Ahuja (Prashant Narayanan) when they meet again in Delhi. Awasthi suggests ravi Kumar for the position of arresting Jagawar in a case. Despite being shocked by Ravi's performance history, Mahavir consents to send him to Muscat on an informal basis for the position. Unaware that this assignment would not be simple, ravi accepts. He also encounters madhubala (Simona J), his former girlfriend and Laila's sister, during the assignment. The remainder of the movie is shaped by what transpires thereafter.
 

The directing by Keith Gomes is essentially good. He does his best to keep the story as straightforward as possible, but there are far too many characters and subplots. Additionally, he states right on that "logic is optional" and that the movie is produced in the style of the 1980s. The audience will just enjoy the insane journey with no cause to protest thanks to that command. It's safe to state that "expect the unexpected" because the producers go to crazy lengths to keep brains aside.
 

Conversely, the direction is quite random. The movie shouldn't be taken seriously, it was agreed. However, in certain locations, events occur suddenly and randomly and might have been prevented. The authors should have come up with better methods to summarize it, and the writing is poor. Finally, it becomes monotonous when five or six songs play consecutively.
 

Scenes like ravi Kumar's protracted introduction, ravi hitting the Godman, ravi threatening Jagawar at the court, the interval, ravi and Syed in the elevator, etc., are a few that jump out. The diamond robbery tune pays homage to the Dharmendra-starring film SHALIMAR [1978] It is really fun and would be liked. The crowd will also react enthusiastically to the pre-climax tune.
 
 

Find out more: