Ruslaan
- 2024
- 2h
IMDb RATING
3.3/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
The unstoppable force Ruslaan, is coming to break free of the chains of conformity. With his gun and guitar, he's about to create a symphony of rebellion like no other.The unstoppable force Ruslaan, is coming to break free of the chains of conformity. With his gun and guitar, he's about to create a symphony of rebellion like no other.The unstoppable force Ruslaan, is coming to break free of the chains of conformity. With his gun and guitar, he's about to create a symphony of rebellion like no other.
Featured reviews
Ruslaan is like a masterclass in how not to make a movie in 2024. Aayush Sharma tries to flex his "mass hero" muscles again, but instead of delivering something entertaining, we're gifted with a mess that feels like it time-traveled from a 90s reject bin. Honestly, the filmmakers seem blissfully unaware that Indian cinema has moved on. They've also hilariously attempted to push the absurd narrative that all Muslim officers are shining examples of patriotism, while the Hindu cop? Yep, you guessed it-he's a traitor. Bold storytelling or just lazy stereotyping?
The film's plot is a worn-out cliché: a terrorist's son proving his loyalty to the country. Groundbreaking stuff, right? Wrong. If they thought the twist in the climax was something new, someone should have told them it was last seen in a Saas-Bahu serial circa 2002. The action scenes are drenched in unnecessary slow motion-seriously, how many angles of Aayush walking in slo-mo do we need? By the third one, I felt like I was stuck in a loop of boredom. The filmmakers seem to think that slow motion equals tension. Spoiler: It doesn't.
Speaking of the cast, Aayush's performance is as forgettable as the plot. The "mass avatar" they've tried to push just doesn't fit. It's like putting a superhero cape on a bored office worker and expecting him to fly. Sushrii Mishraa is there for nothing more than eye candy, because, of course, a film from the 1960s rulebook mandates a bikini scene-even in 2024. Vidya Malvade is supposed to be a tough intelligence officer, but she feels more like a cardboard cutout, and Jagapathi Babu, trying his best to add a pan-India flavor, looks painfully out of place.
The editing? Abysmal. Ruslaan manages to stretch a two-hour runtime into an experience that feels three times longer. The songs are so forgettable, you might wonder if you dreamed them. But honestly, why were they even there? It's like the editor gave up halfway through and thought, "Eh, let's just leave it all in." The production design is so low-budget it feels like the crew raided a discount store five minutes before shooting. At least that would explain why the film looks so shoddy.
Director Karan Butani seems to be living in a parallel universe where outdated masala flicks are still a thing. If this was his attempt to bring that era back, he failed. Spectacularly. Ruslaan is nothing but a torturous ride into mediocrity, and for those who manage to sit through it, congratulations-you've earned a medal for endurance.
The film's plot is a worn-out cliché: a terrorist's son proving his loyalty to the country. Groundbreaking stuff, right? Wrong. If they thought the twist in the climax was something new, someone should have told them it was last seen in a Saas-Bahu serial circa 2002. The action scenes are drenched in unnecessary slow motion-seriously, how many angles of Aayush walking in slo-mo do we need? By the third one, I felt like I was stuck in a loop of boredom. The filmmakers seem to think that slow motion equals tension. Spoiler: It doesn't.
Speaking of the cast, Aayush's performance is as forgettable as the plot. The "mass avatar" they've tried to push just doesn't fit. It's like putting a superhero cape on a bored office worker and expecting him to fly. Sushrii Mishraa is there for nothing more than eye candy, because, of course, a film from the 1960s rulebook mandates a bikini scene-even in 2024. Vidya Malvade is supposed to be a tough intelligence officer, but she feels more like a cardboard cutout, and Jagapathi Babu, trying his best to add a pan-India flavor, looks painfully out of place.
The editing? Abysmal. Ruslaan manages to stretch a two-hour runtime into an experience that feels three times longer. The songs are so forgettable, you might wonder if you dreamed them. But honestly, why were they even there? It's like the editor gave up halfway through and thought, "Eh, let's just leave it all in." The production design is so low-budget it feels like the crew raided a discount store five minutes before shooting. At least that would explain why the film looks so shoddy.
Director Karan Butani seems to be living in a parallel universe where outdated masala flicks are still a thing. If this was his attempt to bring that era back, he failed. Spectacularly. Ruslaan is nothing but a torturous ride into mediocrity, and for those who manage to sit through it, congratulations-you've earned a medal for endurance.
Movie- RUSLAAN (JioCinema)
This spy-thriller Ruslaan starring Aayush Sharma , Sushrii and Jagapathi Babu is a spoof that we didn't want and didn't deserve after a success of antim , Aayush Sharma is so poor in this movie what a downfall. It is a total waste why they've made this. Boring and predictable. So messed up . The climax was needlessly predictable because if it not what i was thinking it would've be more bored. Except the hardwork in bodybuilding that we can see of aayush sharma . Aayush should also do some work on your acting skills too. He under- perform himself out in this one . The Bgm is good i would say but the songs and music is looking weak to me. And Jagapathi Babu why are you doing all this stupid and senseless movie. All other cast was not good too. The storyline is so weak but i would say the action was good with the goreness.
Not recommended.
Do not watch.
This spy-thriller Ruslaan starring Aayush Sharma , Sushrii and Jagapathi Babu is a spoof that we didn't want and didn't deserve after a success of antim , Aayush Sharma is so poor in this movie what a downfall. It is a total waste why they've made this. Boring and predictable. So messed up . The climax was needlessly predictable because if it not what i was thinking it would've be more bored. Except the hardwork in bodybuilding that we can see of aayush sharma . Aayush should also do some work on your acting skills too. He under- perform himself out in this one . The Bgm is good i would say but the songs and music is looking weak to me. And Jagapathi Babu why are you doing all this stupid and senseless movie. All other cast was not good too. The storyline is so weak but i would say the action was good with the goreness.
Not recommended.
Do not watch.
During the last few years Bollywood experimented with the theme related to the Lives, Struggles, Dedication and Supreme Sacrifices of those who work for the Intelligence Department of India. The films of such category may be seen as Tributes to those brave people and the Department that make us proud through their endeavours for the nation., Ruslaan 2024 is a new addition in this category. But about this particular film?
Plot- The Plot is simple. The film tries to depict the desperate effort of an individual to prove his loyalty to India rising above religious affiliation.
Narrative- The way the film has been narrated is boring. The film has drastically failed to take forward the action considering the interests of the viewers. So also, as a film lacks something essential related to military adventure.
Action Sequences - The most boring part of the film is its Action Sequences. The scenes are lengthy and repetition. So also, the film has failed in making Action Sequences realistic which is one of the essential aspects to make such film successful. The film depends more on melodrama.
Co-ordination: The most challenging aspect of such film is successful and effective co-ordination of different dimensions of a film. The Film has some aspects like Romance, Friendship, Paternal love, individual apathy and other aspects. However, the problem is: these are not properly connected to the pivotal theme.
Ending: The film keeps a surprising element at the end. The role-model of the young man Ruslaan discovers his foster father Jagapathi Babu as the traitor. But throughout the film there is no indication of this so that interests of the viewers remain intact to watch that surprising element as the film lacks the most important element; suspense. As audience is not prepared for such ending, this significant aspect of the film has failed to impact as per expectation.
Cast Aayush Sharma, Sushrii Mishraa, Vidya Malvade do not seem impressive. However, Jagapathi Babu proves his genius.
Final Remarks- The Realistic Purview of Ruslaan Movie 2024: it is Old Wine in a New Bottle.
Plot- The Plot is simple. The film tries to depict the desperate effort of an individual to prove his loyalty to India rising above religious affiliation.
Narrative- The way the film has been narrated is boring. The film has drastically failed to take forward the action considering the interests of the viewers. So also, as a film lacks something essential related to military adventure.
Action Sequences - The most boring part of the film is its Action Sequences. The scenes are lengthy and repetition. So also, the film has failed in making Action Sequences realistic which is one of the essential aspects to make such film successful. The film depends more on melodrama.
Co-ordination: The most challenging aspect of such film is successful and effective co-ordination of different dimensions of a film. The Film has some aspects like Romance, Friendship, Paternal love, individual apathy and other aspects. However, the problem is: these are not properly connected to the pivotal theme.
Ending: The film keeps a surprising element at the end. The role-model of the young man Ruslaan discovers his foster father Jagapathi Babu as the traitor. But throughout the film there is no indication of this so that interests of the viewers remain intact to watch that surprising element as the film lacks the most important element; suspense. As audience is not prepared for such ending, this significant aspect of the film has failed to impact as per expectation.
Cast Aayush Sharma, Sushrii Mishraa, Vidya Malvade do not seem impressive. However, Jagapathi Babu proves his genius.
Final Remarks- The Realistic Purview of Ruslaan Movie 2024: it is Old Wine in a New Bottle.
ATS Officer Sameer Singh (Jagapathi Babu) finds Ruslaan during an undercover mission to eliminate suspected terrorists. Sameer saves Ruslaan and eventually adopts him after seeing his state at the orphanage. The grown up Ruslaan (Aayush Sharma) is forced to prove his identity and loyalty all his life, which has made him firm in his decision to join the forces which Sameer objects. This doesn't stop Ruslaan as he willingly becomes the asset of Mantra, his handler and way for joining RAW. On his mission, he uncovers the involvement of China and eventually falls into a trap which makes him the target with his father Sameer leading the team to capture him. How does Ruslaan prove his innocence and also stop an impending attack in Mumbai, forms rest of the story.
The plus is obviously Aayush Sharma's committed performance which does feel too much considering how the film turned out in second half. The delayed production with the change of director, one can clearly notice how basic the writing is and it is designed as a star vehicle to glorify Aayush Sharma on screen. It is watchable as far as the first half goes with the only major minus being the overdose of slow motion shots and forgettable songs. It has enough melodrama and establishes the clear motive for the hero to join the forces. It's a straight forward story with predictable twists.
The problem lies in the second half entirely where the film stops taking itself seriously while Aayush remains committed. In one scene, he provides his phone, having a video and asks his partner to check the co-ordinates for which she literally zooms in the video and swipes right continuously to claim she has found the co-ordinates. The major scenes lack impact and things fall in place rather too conveniently. The final twist was again quite predictable and definitely not well handled. The actors can only do so much when the writing lacks the fizz. I am going with a lenient rating for Aayush Sharma's commitment and Ruslaan offers nothing else.
The plus is obviously Aayush Sharma's committed performance which does feel too much considering how the film turned out in second half. The delayed production with the change of director, one can clearly notice how basic the writing is and it is designed as a star vehicle to glorify Aayush Sharma on screen. It is watchable as far as the first half goes with the only major minus being the overdose of slow motion shots and forgettable songs. It has enough melodrama and establishes the clear motive for the hero to join the forces. It's a straight forward story with predictable twists.
The problem lies in the second half entirely where the film stops taking itself seriously while Aayush remains committed. In one scene, he provides his phone, having a video and asks his partner to check the co-ordinates for which she literally zooms in the video and swipes right continuously to claim she has found the co-ordinates. The major scenes lack impact and things fall in place rather too conveniently. The final twist was again quite predictable and definitely not well handled. The actors can only do so much when the writing lacks the fizz. I am going with a lenient rating for Aayush Sharma's commitment and Ruslaan offers nothing else.
Ruslaan (2024) :
Movie Review -
After Antim, Aayush Sharma again gets into the mass zone to show some improvements, but gets a messy flick instead. This mass avatar of Aayush deserved a better script, a better screenplay, and a better film. Antim was saved due to the remake factor, which had something new for the Hindi audiences since they had not seen a masala flick made on farmers or their sons' issues. Ruslaan is way behind in time in that section. The same outdated ideas of patriotic movies from the terrorist's son prove his loyalty to the country. And if they think that the twist in the climax was really new, then they should have made this film in the 1990s, not 2024. It's startling to know that Hindi, or, for that matter, Indian cinema, is still holding onto those ancient theories when Adivi Sesh has already made a spy thriller like "Goodachari." Watch it and learn instead of wasting time, money, and talent on films like Ruslaan.
Little Ruslaan (Aayush Sharma) is adopted by ATS officer Sameer Singh (Jagapathi Babu) and his wife after he killed Ruslaan's terrorist father in an encounter. Ruslaan grows up to be a spy, trying to get a place in RA&W, but his madam, Mantra (Vidya Malvade), believes that he is not ready for it yet. He was given a mission to collect information from the college group of activists and provide it to other agencies. "Do not engage" is the only mantra he gets from Mantra. But his impulsive and aggressive behaviour always blows his cover. Therefore, Mantra sends a senior agent, Vaani (Sushrii Mishraa), to look after him. During one of the missions, Ruslaan finds himself in trouble as he is declared a terrorist by his own father and should be shot dead. There begins a new and personal mission for innocent Ruslaan to prove that he is loyal to his country.
What Ruslaan lacks is a good story, first of all, and then a screenplay that can hold on to that good story. It lacks both, and that's why I have to say that "there is no Jaan in Ruslaan." Exactly; there is no soul. You don't have a good story or engaging screenplay, and then you have over-the-top and low-grade action set pieces. How should one spend 130 minutes watching it? What are you giving us anyway? Seriously, they needed to look through the story before taking it to the floor. Paper work is cheap; filmmaking is expensive, you know. But did they know it before making the film? It might have suited decently in some low-grade cinema industries, but in Bollywood, you definitely need a production design of higher scale and quality. Ruslaan doesn't look like one, not from a distance. The same goddam chase sequences, the boring conversations between the hero and the villain, then the same old action sequences in slow mo and then there is that irritating twist. Please stop it, says the public with joined hands.
Aayush Sharma's performance is nothing special, but his mass image is definitely something. The presentation should have been better. In the first scene, you see his side angle in slow mo, then after 2 minutes, another slow motion from the backside, and then again another slow mo from the front, followed by slow mo action sequences. How many slow Mos were there, by the way? Somebody tell them one is enough. Sushrii again has nothing to do but be useful to make a good female pair. One bikini scene was mandatory, as per the 1960s rulebook, but sadly, they read it in 2024. A hot-looking intelligence officer like Vidya Malvade is the need of the time, but it can only exist in movies. The south dose of Jagapathi doesn't suit here in any way, but they had to have it to make a pan-India thing nowadays. Sal Yusuf, Beena Banerjee, Richard Bhakti Klein, and Manish Gaharwar get something to do and are grateful for it.
Ruslaan is about 2 hours long and still makes it look like a 3-hour ride. The editing by Rajendra Bhaat is at fault here. What are those songs anyway? Did I even look up at the screen once while they were playing? No, I didn't. Then why didn't he remove them? G. Srinivas Reddy takes you through his blink-and-miss frames in free time, while in busy time, he was looking for some free time, I guess. The production design of the film is bad. It never looks like a moderate-budget film that can be viewed as a decent entertainer. It's below what you call a "low level." Karan Butani is studying old books of masala flicks that don't help in today's time. The syllabus has changed, and he needs to buy new books now. Ruslaan is his mistake. He must admit it and move on to better projects in the future, because there can't be any explanation for making such a bad film. Better luck next time to Aayush and Karan both, and best of luck to those who are going to watch it.
RATING - 3/10*
After Antim, Aayush Sharma again gets into the mass zone to show some improvements, but gets a messy flick instead. This mass avatar of Aayush deserved a better script, a better screenplay, and a better film. Antim was saved due to the remake factor, which had something new for the Hindi audiences since they had not seen a masala flick made on farmers or their sons' issues. Ruslaan is way behind in time in that section. The same outdated ideas of patriotic movies from the terrorist's son prove his loyalty to the country. And if they think that the twist in the climax was really new, then they should have made this film in the 1990s, not 2024. It's startling to know that Hindi, or, for that matter, Indian cinema, is still holding onto those ancient theories when Adivi Sesh has already made a spy thriller like "Goodachari." Watch it and learn instead of wasting time, money, and talent on films like Ruslaan.
Little Ruslaan (Aayush Sharma) is adopted by ATS officer Sameer Singh (Jagapathi Babu) and his wife after he killed Ruslaan's terrorist father in an encounter. Ruslaan grows up to be a spy, trying to get a place in RA&W, but his madam, Mantra (Vidya Malvade), believes that he is not ready for it yet. He was given a mission to collect information from the college group of activists and provide it to other agencies. "Do not engage" is the only mantra he gets from Mantra. But his impulsive and aggressive behaviour always blows his cover. Therefore, Mantra sends a senior agent, Vaani (Sushrii Mishraa), to look after him. During one of the missions, Ruslaan finds himself in trouble as he is declared a terrorist by his own father and should be shot dead. There begins a new and personal mission for innocent Ruslaan to prove that he is loyal to his country.
What Ruslaan lacks is a good story, first of all, and then a screenplay that can hold on to that good story. It lacks both, and that's why I have to say that "there is no Jaan in Ruslaan." Exactly; there is no soul. You don't have a good story or engaging screenplay, and then you have over-the-top and low-grade action set pieces. How should one spend 130 minutes watching it? What are you giving us anyway? Seriously, they needed to look through the story before taking it to the floor. Paper work is cheap; filmmaking is expensive, you know. But did they know it before making the film? It might have suited decently in some low-grade cinema industries, but in Bollywood, you definitely need a production design of higher scale and quality. Ruslaan doesn't look like one, not from a distance. The same goddam chase sequences, the boring conversations between the hero and the villain, then the same old action sequences in slow mo and then there is that irritating twist. Please stop it, says the public with joined hands.
Aayush Sharma's performance is nothing special, but his mass image is definitely something. The presentation should have been better. In the first scene, you see his side angle in slow mo, then after 2 minutes, another slow motion from the backside, and then again another slow mo from the front, followed by slow mo action sequences. How many slow Mos were there, by the way? Somebody tell them one is enough. Sushrii again has nothing to do but be useful to make a good female pair. One bikini scene was mandatory, as per the 1960s rulebook, but sadly, they read it in 2024. A hot-looking intelligence officer like Vidya Malvade is the need of the time, but it can only exist in movies. The south dose of Jagapathi doesn't suit here in any way, but they had to have it to make a pan-India thing nowadays. Sal Yusuf, Beena Banerjee, Richard Bhakti Klein, and Manish Gaharwar get something to do and are grateful for it.
Ruslaan is about 2 hours long and still makes it look like a 3-hour ride. The editing by Rajendra Bhaat is at fault here. What are those songs anyway? Did I even look up at the screen once while they were playing? No, I didn't. Then why didn't he remove them? G. Srinivas Reddy takes you through his blink-and-miss frames in free time, while in busy time, he was looking for some free time, I guess. The production design of the film is bad. It never looks like a moderate-budget film that can be viewed as a decent entertainer. It's below what you call a "low level." Karan Butani is studying old books of masala flicks that don't help in today's time. The syllabus has changed, and he needs to buy new books now. Ruslaan is his mistake. He must admit it and move on to better projects in the future, because there can't be any explanation for making such a bad film. Better luck next time to Aayush and Karan both, and best of luck to those who are going to watch it.
RATING - 3/10*
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Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $32,875
- Runtime2 hours
- Color
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