I think dabangg 3 is the blockbuster movie of the year.
It has a good IMDB rating
So I recommend you to watch this movie and enjoy the action of Bhai
Salman Khan is back to wish us Merry Christmas. Enjoying superstar status like no other today, Khan ticks off all the boxes in the checklist of what his fans typically desire from him. A hero wali entry- tick Slow motion action - double tick Cheesy one liners - tick tick tick One item gaana - tick Shirtless scene - tick tick. ( Even his pants drop in this one) . A formidable villain - tick In short, Dabangg 3 has everything crammed in its two hour fifty minutes run time just to please the lowest common denominator which comprises Salman's loyal fan club. What the film doesn't have is a story, sense and sensibility. Now now, dont take me to be an elite prude or a Bhai hater! I aint. Infact, I personally liked his Dabangg 1 ( 2010) and few recent blockbusters like Bajrangi Bhaijaan ( 2015) and Sultan ( 2016) . I genuinely tried hard to enjoy Dabangg 3 as well but failed. The first half is pathetic where nothing - absolutely nothing - happens. The family shamily drama is a yawn and Chulbul Pandey's ( Salman obviously) backstory with his young sweetheart Khushi ( Saiee Manjrekar) is unexciting, to put it mildly. That debutant Saiee looks like Salman's beti in the romantic scenes makes matter worse. . Next, the main villain Bali Singh ( Kichcha Sudeepa) enters the frame, falls for Chulbul's girl and begins his full on rivalry with Pandeyji. On the films only positive, Kannada Superstar Kichcha Sudeepa plays a truly effective antagonist and actually steals the thunder from Salman bhai in most of the scenes he appears in. Brilliant! Saiee Manjrekar looks pretty but gets too small a role to prove her acting chops. Sonakshi Sinha, reprising her role of Rajjo, is strictly okay. Pramod Khanna fills in for his late brother Vinod Khanna's Prajapati Pandey role. One misses the original Munni Malaika Arora's sexy thumkas in the 'Munna Badnaam hua'item number. On the tech front, editing by Ritesh Soni is below par. Prabhu Deva's direction is even worse. More woe, the songs are not a patch on the previous two installments and they keep popping up every ten fifteen minutes to slow down the already sluggish narrative. The action finale is stretched beyond a point of endurance. Finally, Dabangg 3 seems to be a hurriedly made and haphazardly assembled product which adds no value to the franchise.