Bharat Bhhagya Viddhaata is the film based on the biggest nightmare and loss for india were when Mumbai burned in November 2008. The images of Taj Hotel in flames, commandos rappelling down buildings — they never really leave you. But here's what most of us never saw: inside Cama Hospital, nurses were hiding patients in dark corridors, shielding newborns, whispering courage to women in labor — all while two armed terrorists walked those same floors. Director Manoj Tapadiya's Bharat Bhagya Vidhata finally tells their story, and honestly, it's long overdue.
Storyline
Geeta, played by Kangana Ranaut, is the kind of nurse you'd want beside you on the worst day of your life — calm, sharp, deeply human. The film opens with police calling her in to identify a captured terrorist, and that one moment of hesitation on her face tells you everything. From there, the story slides into flashback — into the ordinary lives of these nurses before that extraordinary night. Their small fights, their laughter in break rooms, their private heartbreaks. You get to know them as people first. So when the terror begins and the lights go out, you're not watching characters — you're watching someone you care about make impossible choices.
Positive Points
Kangana is genuinely remarkable here. No glamour, no grand speeches — just a woman doing her job under conditions no job description ever prepares you for. The supporting cast feels equally real; nobody is playing a type. The film also has the courage to be quietly angry — about nurses being used as domestic help by senior officers, about award ceremonies turned political. There are certain scenes throughout this film that have more of an impact than a full-on action sequence; there's no question about it! When listening to Sukhwinder Singh's title track, you will likely get chills, and when you hear Shreya Ghoshal's song "Nabz Nabz," it will haunt you well beyond the closing credits.
Negative Points
A few emotional moments feel slightly forced — like the film doesn't fully trust its own story to move you, so it nudges a little too hard. Some characters deserved more screen time than they got.
Overall: It's not that this is a flawless film, just one that is worth seeing. These three women assisted in saving just under four hundred lives that evening and returned to their respective homes with absolutely zero media attention post-event; so let's all do our best to support them by viewing the movie as often as possible!