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Ikkis - Dharmendra and Agastya Nanda Photograph: (X/Maddock Films)
In an era where cinema is consumed alongside instant verdicts on social media, a film’s fate is often sealed online before audiences even leave the theatre. Sriram Raghavan’s Ikkis has found itself caught in exactly this storm. What began as discussion quickly escalated into an all-out digital backlash, with X turning into a battleground of accusations, outrage, and nationalistic rhetoric.
Related Story: Ikkis Review: Agastya Nanda impresses in a poignant war drama as Dharmendra moves audience in his final appearance
As conversations around Ikkis gained traction, timelines transformed into virtual courtrooms. Users stepped into the roles of critics and judges, accusing the film of bending history, pushing ideological narratives, and showing selective empathy. The controversy intensified when the film was repeatedly contrasted with Aditya Dhar’s Dhurandhar, which many online now celebrate as the definitive template for patriotic storytelling.
Hashtags, Hostility, and a Film in Freefall
The reaction to Ikkis has been swift and unforgiving. Rather than balanced critique, much of the discourse has unfolded as organised trolling. Derisive hashtags surged, and posts oscillated between anger and outright condemnation.
For many users, the film symbolised everything they believe is wrong with contemporary Bollywood’s handling of war stories. Much of this anger centres on Ikkis’ depiction of the 1971 war and its treatment of Param Vir Chakra awardee Arun Khetrapal.
Lt. Arun Khetrapal didn't die for a 'warm & emotional' reunion years later; he died stopping an aggressor that was committing unspeakable atrocities.
— Shailendra Mishra (@imShail_3) January 2, 2026
Softening that reality to make a 'feel-good' movie is a direct insult to every Indian soldier who saw the ground reality of 1971. pic.twitter.com/1YDlJGyAP4
Critics online argue that the narrative sidelines Indian bravery, instead focusing on portraying Pakistani soldiers with empathy while diminishing the Indian Army’s image. This perceived imbalance has become the emotional core of the backlash.
“Whose Story Is Being Told?”
One viral comment accuses Ikkis of “ruining the story of a great war hero” by introducing what the user sees as misplaced sympathy for the Pakistani side. Others reinforce this view, describing the film as a “documentary with the wrong emotional compass.”
Totally ruined the story of a Great War hero Arun Khetrapal PVC by showing Paki love in #Ikkis. Only Paki agents and sleeper cell operators will support this movie. SriRam Raghavan makes a badly made documentary with Paki love. After Dhurandhar this kind of crap won’t sell! Adil…
— Shankara 🇮🇳 🇮🇱 🇷🇺 (@Sshankara) January 2, 2026
Such remarks, often delivered in sharp and inflammatory language, suggest that detractors see the film not as flawed cinema, but as ideologically suspect.
Bollywood drops another Gem movie called #Ikkis
— SHIKHAR (@Likeshikhar20) January 2, 2026
>Indian Army is shown k*lling civilians n burning down an entire village
>Indian army has k*lled familes of Pakistan soldiers that's why they hate india
>Hindus are safe in Pakistan n Pakistani Muslims respect Bhagat Singh too pic.twitter.com/IjgS9Czd4g
Another post alleges that Indian soldiers are portrayed as “foolish or barbaric,” while Pakistani soldiers appear “patriotic and kind,” framing Ikkis as a retelling of the war from a Pakistani lens.
People who thinks this is a patriotic movie are dumb 🤡
— TARUN👁️ (@TarunMujalde) January 1, 2026
Director Sriram Raghvan intentionally made this movie to show Pakistani soldiers in good light, Just search how brutally Pakistan army tortures our soldiers when they found one, Shame on Bollywood 💩 #Ikkispic.twitter.com/WFyhRwfqWQ
For critics, the issue goes beyond storytelling choices and into questions of national loyalty.
When Dhurandhar Becomes the Measuring Stick
The outrage surrounding Ikkis has only grown louder due to relentless comparisons with Dhurandhar. Users frequently cite Dhar’s line, “Hindustan ka pehla dushman Hindustani hai,” arguing that Ikkis exemplifies this sentiment. In contrast, Dhurandhar is being upheld as uncompromisingly nationalist, a film that aligns with prevailing audience expectations.
#Ikkis movie shows Indian Army soldiers as fool, Jokers, barbaric and pakistani soldiers as patriotic, peaceful and kind. Movie is all about pakistani pov on 1971 war.
— Ezhil 🦚 (@Ezhil_Goveas) January 1, 2026
As #Dhurandhar explains, "Hindustan ka pahla dushman Hindustani hai" or Ikkis ki team isme sabse upar aati hai" pic.twitter.com/hWjwvNmAE5
In the post-Dhurandhar landscape, many netizens argue that war films which challenge traditional patriotic frameworks are unlikely to resonate- emotionally or commercially.
Whether Ikkis ultimately withstands this digital onslaught remains to be seen, but for now, the court of social media has delivered a loud and brutal verdict.
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