When his father is lynched by a mob after being framed by a gangster, a young boy leaves his village along with his pregnant mother and flees to Mumbai. He takes up a life of crime and swears to avenge his father. A remake of the 1990 film.
When his father is lynched by a mob after being framed by a gangster, a young boy leaves his village along with his pregnant mother and flees to Mumbai. He takes up a life of crime and swears to avenge his father. A remake of the 1990 film.
The film champions an individualistic solution of personal revenge and vigilante justice to restore family honor and combat corruption, rather than advocating for systemic or collective change, aligning with themes of individual responsibility.
The movie features a cast that is diverse within its Indian cultural context, consistent with its setting and story. Its narrative, a revenge drama, does not engage in explicit critiques of traditional identities or center on overt DEI themes, instead focusing on a classic struggle between good and evil.
The film 'Agneepath' does not feature any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative is solely centered on a protagonist's quest for revenge and justice, thus there is no portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements to evaluate.
The film does not feature any female characters engaging in or winning close-quarters physical combat against male opponents. Female characters are present but are not depicted in action roles that involve direct physical confrontation.
The 2012 film is a remake of the 1990 original. A review of the major characters in both versions reveals no instances where a character established as one gender in the source material is portrayed as a different gender in the remake.
Agneepath (2012) is a remake of the 1990 Indian film. All major characters in both versions are portrayed by actors of Indian descent, maintaining the original racial depiction. No character established as one race was portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources