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“Chuna Laga Diya BC”: Netizens Are Split Over Dhurandhar: The Revenge Teaser


A gritty, action-oriented movie poster drenched in a deep red hue. In the center stands a man with long, dark hair and a thick beard, looking intensely at the camera. The background is a textured, rainy environment. Large, dark, stylized text at the top reads "THE REVENGE," while the word "DHURANDHAR" is displayed at the bottom in a metallic, 3D-effect font.
Dhurandhar: The Revenge poster

Some teasers drop quietly. And then there's Dhurandhar: The Revenge teaser that walks into the internet, knocks over a table, and starts a full-blown fight in the comment section. Within minutes of the teaser landing, timelines were flooded with one phrase again and again: “Chuna laga diya bc.”


Some people were furious. Some people were weirdly impressed. Some people were laughing through the pain. And suddenly this film wasn’t just a movie anymore. It became a moment.



Why the Dhurandhar: The Revenge teaser hit like a betrayal for half the internet



The biggest reason people feel played by Dhurandhar: The Revenge is simple:

The teaser shows something people have already seen.


Fans on X are pointing out that a major clip in the teaser is the same footage that was used in the post-credit scene of the first Dhurandhar film. That discovery sets off the anger.


HRb (@qammander) writes:

“Not at all exciting. Nothing looked fresh from what we already saw in the end credits.”

Another post says the teaser

shows nothing, yet massive hype was created. Fans feel cheated and disappointed by an empty teaser.”


Film critic Siya Oberoi posts:

“Spent 1 minute on the Dhurandhar teaser and regretted it. Ordinary gang war stuff, nothing new. Underwhelming AF.”

The marketing pushes Dhurandhar: The Revenge as a dark, gritty revenge saga.

But the teaser itself opens with the hero walking in slow motion through smoke, the music swelling like a mass-entry scene, with glossy, poster-style shots instead of new story beats. Everything looks clean. Glossy. Controlled.


So when fans feel tricked. It is about being shown old material dressed up as something new. And in today’s internet culture, nothing makes people angrier than feeling tricked.




Why some fans are actually defending Dhurandhar: The Revenge


Here’s the twist, though. Not everyone hated it. A big chunk of viewers are defending Dhurandhar: The Revenge like their life depends on it. And their argument is kind of valid.



They’re saying: “It’s a teaser. Not the movie.” “Why are people acting like they watched the full film?” “At least it looks expensive.”

And honestly? They’re not wrong.

The visuals are sharp. The scale looks big. The lead actor has a presence. There is something exciting hiding in there.


Some fans are even saying the teaser is deliberately misleading, that it’s playing with expectations before dropping something darker in the full trailer.

So now the internet is stuck in this weird place where no one knows whether to be mad or to wait.



The real problem with Dhurandhar: The Revenge is trust, not visuals


Official trailer of Dhurandhar: The Revenge via YouTube

This is where it gets interesting. The backlash around Dhurandhar: The Revenge isn’t really about lighting, editing, or background score. It’s about trust.


Audiences are tired. They’ve been burned by too many trailers that promise depth and deliver surface-level spectacle. They’ve sat through too many “revenge” films that forget the revenge part halfway through.


So when people saw this teaser, their brains went: “Do they have nothing else in the bag?

The reactions are a reflection of people wanting more from the world of Lyari. A glimpse of Hamza taking over the crown after Rehman, his handling of Uzair, and the infamous 8-day gunwar that actually took place.


Give us more Aditya Dhar! That's what the fans are screaming.


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