
Varun Dhawan's character, a trainee police officer in a foreign land, sums up the hypocrisy when he says "I work for them, but I listen only to Modiji (India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi)". He's your average Joe - gawking at a woman's low-cut blouse, but threatening to beat up anyone who pesters a woman. The song could be the anthem of every Hindi film hero. Ghostbusters is hardly the disaster the trolls have been predicting With one disclaimer: these otherwise meek men turn violent if someone doesn't stand up while India's national anthem is playing, criticizes the country or harasses a woman. In Rohit Dhawan's Dishoom, the opening credits roll to a rap song mouthed by two brawny protagonists who describe themselves as "simple" men disappointed in love who prefer home food to eating in five-star hotels.


Dishoom is a buddy-cop film about the kidnapping of an Indian cricketer in Dubai.
