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A Film So Serious It Becomes Funny This video is a critical roast and commentary on Mohan G’s Draupathi 2—focusing on amateur filmmaking, weak storytelling, poor cinematic craft, and the harmful social impact such movies can create when ideology is prioritised over responsibility and art. Draupathi 2 positions itself as a 14th-century historical epic, but what unfolds on screen feels less like cinema and more like a half-researched history lecture mixed with loud dialogues and exaggerated emotions. The film uses a modern-day framing device to jump into the past, but instead of building curiosity, it exposes the lack of narrative depth right from the beginning. The central character’s journey—from warrior to king—is treated superficially. There is no organic character development, no emotional grounding, and no believable progression. Conflicts are introduced abruptly, resolved conveniently, and often exist only to serve a pre-decided message rather than the story. This results in a screenplay that feels forced, disconnected, and unintentionally comical at times. From a filmmaking perspective, the movie clearly suffers from amateur execution: Flat staging of scenes Weak VFX and battle choreography Excessive exposition instead of visual storytelling Overuse of loud, preachy dialogues to compensate for poor writing Instead of “show, don’t tell,” the film chooses “shout and repeat”. What has drawn the strongest reaction from audiences is not just the technical weakness, but the social impact of the narrative. Many viewers and critics have pointed out how the film: Simplifies complex historical events Pushes polarising portrayals without nuance Encourages an “us vs them” mindset Replaces responsible storytelling with ideological signalling Cinema is powerful. When handled irresponsibly, it can misinform, divide, and normalise biased thinking—especially when historical subjects are treated as propaganda tools rather than lived, layered realities. Public reaction has been highly polarised: Mainstream critics called out the poor screenplay, pacing issues, and lack of cinematic finesse Social media users mocked the film’s execution, dialogues, and seriousness Online discussions turned the movie into meme material rather than meaningful cinema Box-office response reflected limited acceptance beyond a niche audience This video does not attack individuals or communities. It critiques craft, intent, and accountability in filmmaking. Questioning bad cinema—especially when it claims to represent history and society—is not hatred; it’s necessary criticism. If cinema wants respect as an art form, it must accept criticism when it fails—especially when it pretends to educate while actually misleading. 🎬 This is not a hate video. This is a film-making reality check.