Baaghi 4 Movie Review: Tiger Shroff Roars, Story Stumbles

Baaghi 4

The rebel is back.
Tiger Shroff. The face of Baaghi. The man who flies higher than physics. Punches harder than logic.

And yes, Baaghi 4 finally lands in theatres. The hype? Immense. The expectations? Sky-high. But does it deliver? That’s where things get messy.

Baaghi 4

A Hero Larger Than Life

Tiger enters. Slow motion. Dust rising. Shirt torn. Eyes blazing. The crowd whistles. You know it already—this is his empire.

He fights twenty men like they are paper dolls. He flips over cars. He smashes through walls. No hesitation. No weakness. That’s Tiger’s brand. That’s what Baaghi promises.

And action? Oh, it’s brutal. Raw. Bone-crunching. The kind of stuff that makes your popcorn spill.

But then, comes the question—what about the story?

Same Path, Bigger Canvas

The plot feels familiar. Same rebel heart. Same emotional pain. But this time, they raise the stakes.
Global villains. Bigger guns. Explosions that can light up the sky.

Tiger’s character is pulled into an international conspiracy. Betrayal, revenge, chaos. The screenplay tries to keep up with his energy. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it collapses.

The drama works in bits. A lost love. A tragic twist. But in between the loud punches, emotions often get drowned.

Baaghi 4

Action: The Pulse of Baaghi 4

This film doesn’t whisper. It screams.
Fights are designed like a dance. Every punch choreographed, every fall dramatic. Helicopters, skyscrapers, deserts—name it, Tiger fights there.

The hand-to-hand combat is insane. You see blood, sweat, rage. At times, you even forget you’re in Bollywood. Feels straight out of a Hollywood blockbuster.

But yes, sometimes it gets cartoonish. Tiger surviving ten bullets, jumping off impossible heights. You either cheer. Or you laugh. No middle ground.

Performances: One-Man Show

Let’s be clear. Baaghi 4 is Tiger Shroff’s playground. He runs it, owns it, destroys it.

His dialogue delivery? Still wooden. But his body, his energy, his action—unmatched.
The female lead? Pretty face. Some emotional scenes. But the script sidelines her badly. You forget her when Tiger enters.

The villain? Starts with fire. Ends with cliché. Once again, Baaghi struggles to give us a memorable bad guy.

Side actors? Just filling gaps. Nothing more.

Music & Visuals

The soundtrack follows the usual formula. A romantic ballad. A high-energy dance track. Some background thunder during fight scenes. Catchy in parts, forgettable in others.

Cinematography, though, deserves praise. Wide shots. Dusty streets. Neon nights. The film looks stylish, even when the story drags.

Final Verdict

Baaghi 4 is noise. It is power. It is Tiger Shroff showing why he is still Bollywood’s action star.

But storytelling? Weak. Dialogues? Average. Supporting cast? Underused.

If you enter the hall for logic, you’ll be disappointed. If you enter for adrenaline, you’ll clap, shout, whistle.

So the verdict is simple—
For Tiger fans, it’s a feast.
For others, it’s a storm too loud, too chaotic.

Baaghi 4 doesn’t break new ground. It just smashes the old one harder.