Who Directed The Film Raees?

2026-04-12 08:34:52 271

4 Answers

Aiden
Aiden
2026-04-13 01:43:22
Rahul Dholakia directed 'Raees', and what a ride that film was! I remember watching it in theaters, completely blown away by how Shah Rukh Khan transformed into this gritty, morally ambiguous character. Dholakia's direction had this raw energy—like you could almost smell the tension in those Gujarat streets. The way he balanced action with human drama reminded me of those 70s Bollywood crime flicks, but with slicker pacing.

What really stuck with me was how the film didn’t glorify its protagonist. It left you questioning right and wrong, which is rare for mainstream Bollywood. Dholakia’s earlier work like 'Parzania' showed he isn’t afraid of tough subjects, and 'Raees' proved he could handle scale without losing his edge.
Gregory
Gregory
2026-04-17 04:33:35
Dholakia! That name stuck with me after 'Raees' because the film felt like such a departure from typical SRK roles. The director crafted this world where every character—even the smaller ones—had weight. Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s cop? Pure gold. The chase scenes weren’t just mindless explosions; they had rhythm, almost like a dance. I’ve revisited the liquor smuggling sequences a dozen times—the way tension builds through edits and that killer soundtrack. Makes me wish more directors would trust audiences with gray-area storytelling like this.
Jade
Jade
2026-04-17 18:13:18
Rahul Dholakia’s direction in 'Raees' was like watching someone juggle dynamite—controlled chaos. Shah Rukh’s performance was electric, sure, but the film’s texture? All Dholakia. The way he used shadows in the night scenes, or how the songs actually advanced the plot instead of just being eye candy. Makes you wonder why he doesn’t direct more often—this guy gets pulp cinema’s heartbeat.
Lila
Lila
2026-04-18 14:24:03
Funny how 'Raees' became this cult favorite despite mixed reviews. Rahul Dholakia’s fingerprints are all over it—those abrupt cuts, the way dialogue hits like punches. I’m a sucker for films where the setting feels like a character, and Ahmedabad’s alleys practically breathed in this one. The director’s background in documentaries shows; there’s this gritty realism even in larger-than-life moments. And that climax? No spoilers, but it’s rare to see a Bollywood hero’s arc end with such haunting ambiguity. Makes me wanna hunt down Dholakia’s lesser-known shorts now.
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