Underneath the glossy surface, Dhruva explores profound themes:

A slick, intelligent, and powerfully acted thriller that proves brains always triumph over brawn. A must-watch for fans of crime dramas and cat-and-mouse storytelling.

Even years after its release, Dhruva remains a benchmark for how to remake a film successfully. It is a textbook example of elevating source material by understanding the target audience’s sensibilities. The film works because it respects the audience’s intelligence. It doesn’t explain every twist; it trusts you to keep up.

The film boasts a rich, dark, and stylish palette. The lighting shifts dramatically between Dhruva’s world (warm, vibrant) and Siddharth’s world (cold, blue, sterile). The framing of the conversations—often using split screens, wide shots to emphasize isolation, and extreme close-ups during moments of realization—adds to the psychological depth.

is not your typical villain. He is a respected scientist, a philanthropist, and a visionary. To the world, he is a savior. But beneath the polished exterior lies a cold, calculating mastermind who has built a parallel healthcare mafia. Siddharth’s plan is chillingly logical: create artificial scarcities of essential medicines, sell life-saving drugs at exorbitant black-market prices, and even engineer epidemics to boost his profits. He justifies his actions with a sociopathic rationale—that he is only exploiting the system, and that the poor and uneducated deserve their fate.