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The Ba***ds Of Bollywood review: Unabashedly whacky take on Bollywood with an overdose of expletives

September 24, 2025 by Keyur Seta 1 Comment

Storyline: The Ba***ds Of Bollywood revolves around Aasmaan Singh (Lakshya), who dreams of becoming a famous movie star. After arriving in Mumbai from his hometown Delhi and struggling for some time, he gets an opportunity to showcase his heroic skills and bags the film Revolver. The movie becomes a hit and he achieves initial stardom.  

Aasmaan stays with his uncle Avtar (Manoj Pahwa), who has been struggling all his life to become a singer and musician, and his loyal best friend Parvaiz (Raghav Juyal). His mother Neeta (Mona Singh) once dreamt of becoming an actress but could not be more than a background dancer. His father Rajat (Vijayant Kohli) is suffering from a liver disease.

The producer of Revolver, Freddy Sodawallah (Manish Chaudhari), asks Aasmaan to sign an exclusive three film deal with him. Aasmaan’s manager and friend Sanya (Anyaa Singh) urges him to take his time and not sign in a huff as she wants bigger producers to sign him. She convinces Karan Johar (Karan Johar) to cast Aasmaan in his next. However, unknown to Sanya, Sodawallah tricks Aasmaan in signing the three film deal.

Meanwhile, Karishma Talvar (Sahher Bambba), daughter of the superstar Ajay Talvar (Bobby Deol) and hence a ‘nepo kid’, gets pissed off with Aasmaan during a roundtable interview. Later on, it is revealed that Karan wants Karishma to star opposite Aasmaan in his film. Ajay, for some reason, hates Aasmaan and wants him removed from Karan’s film.

Review: The Ba***ds Of Bollywood is basically a tale of a simple boy with big dreams of becoming a film star. But his story is told while giving an inside glimpse of the workings of the Hindi film industry in an over-the-top manner.

The USP of the show is the whacky humour and the unpredictability of the situations. The humour relies a lot on meta references, mostly about characters that play themselves (Karan Johar and a number of others from the film industry). But it’s done in a smart and witty manner, except in the scene where a producer brutally kicks a female production designer, which wasn’t funny.

Debutant writer and director Aryan Khan’s sense of humour does take you by a pleasant surprise. What’s noteworthy is the self-deprecating humour on himself and his drug case. The show also has a few fictional characters who seem to be inspired from real-life stars from the industry. If you are able to guess about them, it increases the fun element.  

But the show suffers from an unnecessary overdose of cuss words. So much so, that they cease to have an impact after the initial episodes itself. In fact, it won’t be wrong to state that there is an expletive in almost every sentence. Some developments are also too convenient. But a bigger negative is that the proceedings become too serious and don’t fit the nature of the show after a few episodes.

However, the narrative brings in an unexpected and major twist in the end, which gives you a jolt and turns the whole show on its head! This also takes care of a question of why one character hates another to the core. There are chances that the twist won’t work for many. It worked for this reviewer though.

The Ba***ds Of Bollywood has a long list of cast members and none of them disappoint. Lakshya fits in the role of a struggler who becomes a star and goes through unusual circumstances. He makes the journey of the main protagonist believable. Bobby Deol shines while playing a grey character. He also excels in fight scenes. Sahher Bambba succeeds in displaying her talent as a star kid. Anyaa Singh is perfect in the role of Aasmaan’s manager.

Manoj Pahwa, Mona Singh and Vijayant Kohli are also fine as Aasmaan’s family members. Mona gets a meaty part later on. Manish Chaudhari is excellent as the veteran producer. Karan Johar’s character is different from him in real life and he too provides a fine act. Rajat Bedi sportingly plays a character inspired from his real character. He leaves behind a strong impact. Divik Sharma as the weird brother of Karishma fits the character to the T. The rest of the supporting actors like Gautami Kapoor, Meherzan Mazda and others are fine too. Eshika Dey gets noticeable at the very end.

From the cameos, Shah Rukh Khan, Arshad Warsi, Emraan Hashmi and Ranveer Singh impress the most.

But the most impactful actor of the show is Raghav Juyal. He is extremely likable and humorous. To stand out from such a long list of cast and special star appearances is a major achievement.  

Overall: The Ba***ds Of Bollywood is a fun ride with a few potholes that are taken care of by the final twist.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Director: Aryan Khan

Producers: Red Chillies Entertainment

Writers: Aryan Khan, Bijaj Siddiqi and Manav Chauhan Cast: Lakshya, Sahher Bambba, Bobby Deol, Raghav Juyal, Mona Singh, Manoj Pahwa, Manish Chaudhari, Karan Johar, Vijayant Kohli

Also Read: Jolly LLB 3 review: Akshay Kumar, Arshad Warsi & last 30 minutes are the highlights

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Filed Under: Bollywood Tagged With: Bads Of Bollywood Aryan Khan, Bads Of Bollywood Cast Actors, Bads Of Bollywood Netflix Review, Bads Of Bollywood Review, Bads Of Bollywood Story, Bads Of Bollywood Web Series Review, The Bads Of Bollywood Review

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