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Ravi Kumar is the younger brother of Judge Soumitra Devi and Mohan Kumar. He and his sister have different views and ideas. They lack understanding and that is why he decides to be apart from his sister. Raghu is the son of MLA Raj Shekhar. He marries Kamla, daughter of a poor man Ganesh on the wish of his father who wants to take political advantage of the marriage. But things go wrong and Kamla is killed by Raghu. Now, he makes different attempts to save his son from law. Now all the movie tells his attempts to save his son and Ravi's attempts to give his son the punishment. There are also other small things happening in life of other characters.
Ravi Kumar is the younger brother of Judge Soumitra Devi and Mohan Kumar. He and his sister have different views and ideas. They lack understanding and that is why he decides to be apart from his sister. Raghu is the son of MLA Raj Shekhar. He marries Kamla, daughter of a poor man Ganesh on the wish of his father who wants to take political advantage of the marriage. But things go wrong and Kamla is killed by Raghu. Now, he makes different attempts to save his son from law. Now all the movie tells his attempts to save his son and Ravi's attempts to give his son the punishment. There are also other small things happening in life of other characters.
The film's narrative champions individual vigilante action and personal responsibility to combat corruption and restore family honor, implicitly critiquing the state's ability to deliver justice.
The film's casting reflects the typical diversity found within Indian cinema, without engaging with the concept of 'traditionally white roles' or explicit race/gender swaps. Its narrative is expected to portray traditional identities, such as male and heterosexual, in a neutral or positive light without explicit critique.
The film integrates Hindu cultural and religious elements into its narrative, often portraying traditional values and devotion as positive aspects of character and society without any critical or negative framing.
The film 'Dilwaala' does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. The plot focuses on conventional themes of action, romance, and family drama, without incorporating queer identities or storylines.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Dilwaala (1986) is a remake of the 1983 Telugu film Palletoori Monagadu. A review of the main characters in both versions indicates that all significant roles maintain the same gender as their source material counterparts.
Dilwaala (1986) is a remake of the 1983 Telugu film Palletoori Monagadu. Both films feature Indian actors portraying Indian characters, maintaining the same racial category for the characters across versions. No character's race was changed from its established canon.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources