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Critics noted their "bromance" as the film's core strength, fueled by intense on-screen chemistry .

Bikram went underground. He became a ghost in the Sundarbans, running small-time gunrunning. He grew a grey beard and forgot how to smile. Bala spent seven years in a maximum-security prison, learning to read and write, becoming a different kind of hard. gunday

Bikram nodded slowly. “What now?”

Betrayal doesn’t kill a gunda — it breaks the rule. And the only rule Bikram and Bala ever had was each other. Critics noted their "bromance" as the film's core

Released in 2014, Ali Abbas Zafar’s Gunday arrives wrapped in the vibrant, high-octane aesthetic typical of Yash Raj Films. On the surface, it presents itself as an action-drama about two coal bandits rising to power in 1980s Kolkata. However, beneath the layers of grease, muscle, and adrenaline-pumping soundtrack lies a classic tragedy about the fragility of male bonding. While the film is often remembered for its stylized portrayal of crime and its controversial historical liberties, its narrative core is a compelling exploration of how ambition and jealousy can dismantle even the strongest of brotherhoods. He grew a grey beard and forgot how to smile

The protagonists grow from petty "wagon breakers" stealing coal from trains into the city's most powerful black-marketing mafia dons between 1971 and 1988.

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