Chhota Bheem: Kung Fu Dhamaka

Chhota Bheem: Kung Fu Dhamaka is a 2019 Indian action-adventure martial arts drama film written and directed by Rajiv Chilaka. the film is based on the characters Chhota Bheem and his friends. This is the 4th theatrical film on Chhota Bheem.[3] The film was distributed by Yash Raj Films and released in two different languages Hindi and English in 2D and 3D version.

Chhota Bheem Kung Fu Dhamaka
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRajiv Chilaka
Produced byRajiv Chilaka
Based onChhota Bheem
by Rajiv Chilaka
Production
company
Distributed byYash Raj Films
Release date
  • 10 May 2019 (2019-05-10) (India)
Running time
113 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageEnglish
Hindi
Budget70 crore (US$9.8 million)
Box office136 crore (US$19 million)[2]

Characters

Regular characters

  • Bheem— Bheem has been training in the martial art of Kung Fu. King Indraverma wanted Bheem to go to China and take part in the world's most prestigious martial arts event.
  • Chutki— Long time friend, Chutki always has a nugget of wisdom up her sleeve. She is the brains to the brawn of the team.
  • Raju— Slightly older than a toddler, Raju is as enthusiastic and fearless as Bheem.
  • Jaggu— Bheem's compatriot from Dholakpur, the talking walking monkey knows how to kick a leg both in a fight and while having fun.
  • Kalia— Bheem's lifelong friend and troublemaker, Kalia loves food and a good fighter. He takes part in the Kung Fu competition and gets beaten.
  • Dholu Bholu— The twins are the young jokesters of the gang from Dholakpur, more buddies of Kalia but equally a part of Bheem's gang

from Dholakpur.

Film specific characters

  • Ming – A naughty young lad, street smart, a martial art student, a friend to Kia's and a friend of Bheem and gang who are the emperor's guests from Dhoalkpur. Brave Ming puts his life on the line to rescue princess Kia. He previously appeared in Chhota Bheem: Master of Shaolin
  • Kia — a Daughter to emperor Jian, queen of dragon land, princess Kia is the life and blood of the kingdom of China. She is a happy child until Zuhu returns to China.
  • Zuhu A long thin scar runs on Zuhu's face, reminding him of the day when his uncle emperor Jian kicks him out of the kingdom, abolishing him for life. In Zuhu's mind, he had always been the heir to the throne. But then the dragon lords chose Kia and Zuhu burning with rage one night picked up a knife and raised it on baby Kia. Emperor Jian stopped him, broken all of their years together and banished Zuhu from the kingdom.

But after years of planning, plotting, learning, Zuhu is more powerful than ever, a part demon who could summon dark forces at his will. This time he is taking princess Kia and all the powers she possesses and no one in the entire kingdom can stop him.

  • Emperor Jian — A decades-old act of mercy by emperor Jian comes back to haunt him when his nephew returns and kidnaps Jian's daughter Kia. The once mighty emperor of China is now a heartbroken man.

Reception

The Times of India gave the movie 3 stars out of 5 and said "Despite the minor hiccups, ‘Chhota Bheem: Kung Fu Dhamaka’ largely works due to its strong emotional content."[4] The Indo-Asian News Service (IANS) wrote, "The plot and the screenplay, though laced with verbose exposition, is uncomplicated, smooth and direct with not much emphasis given to the finer nuances of Kung Fu. Nevertheless, the well-designed action sequences are crisp, relevant and lack the fun element that was noticed in the previous Chhota Bheem editions. The dialogues too sound bland and unimpressive."[5]

gollark: If you put a pre-most-bad-things Hitler in Philadelphia, and he did not go around doing *any* genocides or particularly bad things, how would he have been bad?
gollark: It seems problematic to go around actually blaming said soldiers when, had they magically been in a different environment somehow, they could have been fine.
gollark: Both, really.
gollark: Yes. It would be preferable if they did *not* do such things. But I don't think the average random soldier can be reasonably expected not to.
gollark: If everyone around you seems to be fine with it and you fear that if you seem *not* fine with it you'll be punished in some way, you'll just rationalize all the way to beeland.

References

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