Phir Aayi Hasseen Dillruba: Taapsee Pannu movies shouldn't take pride in imitating Sandeep Reddy Vanga's narrative style.

Scene After Credits: Taapsee Pannu's Phir Aayi Hasseen Dillruba serves as a powerful illustration of how even scathing criticisms can enmesh themselves in the very stories they aim to refute.

Phir Aayi Hasseen Dillruba: Taapsee Pannu movies shouldn't take pride in imitating Sandeep Reddy Vanga's narrative style.

At this point, every person in the film industry should have an Animal AnswerTM in their holster, just like the nepo-babies who get coaching from moms and managers on how to answer problems about privilege that come up. You never know who might pop up from behind a bush and ask you what you thought of the contentious smash directed by Sandeep Reddy Vanga. Being safe is preferable to being sorry. Actor Taapsee Pannu, the star of this week's Phir Aayi Hasseen Dillruba, stunned everyone with what may have been the most convincing Animal AnswerTM of them all after nearly every one of her colleagues knotted themselves up trying to look woke and not enrage the most successful filmmaker in the nation.

Taapsee stated at Expresso, which was presented by The Indian Express, that although she can appreciate the movie's appeal on paper, she disagrees with certain of Vanga's artistic decisions. She brought up a point that most people have overlooked: "It was a little strange to hear cheers and whistles at certain moments where I wouldn't have liked the BGM to grow like that, where the audience is forced to cheer and clap." Therefore, it's puzzling that an actor who seems to grasp these subtleties would have produced a film that effectively plays like something Vanga might wish to be exempt from taxes.

Also read: Maharaj: Netflix's colossally botched historical drama stars Junaid Khan as the world's greatest red flag.

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