But Ajay is a walking red flag. He lies about his job, hides Nisha from his social circle, and essentially treats her like a piece of furniture. The first half of the film establishes this toxic dynamic with a lightness that feels almost uncomfortable. The "Bawaal" (the chaos) of their relationship is supposed to be the hook, but the film has a much bigger twist waiting in Europe. But Ajay is a walking red flag
You cannot write about Bawaal without addressing the backlash. Within hours of its release, social media exploded. Critics and viewers were horrified by the film's central conceit:
At its core, Bawaal tells the story of Ajay Dixit (Varun Dhawan), a charming but narcissistic small-town Lucknowi tutor who cares more about his "Izzat" (respect) than his new bride, Nisha (Janhvi Kapoor). Theirs is a marriage of desperation—Ajay needs a wife to look like a "responsible man," and Nisha needs an escape from her overbearing family. The "Bawaal" (the chaos) of their relationship is
Instead of a standard rom-com resolution, the film uses the horrors of history as a mirror. Ajay, listening to stories of the soldiers and victims of the war, finally realizes that his "problems" (a lost reputation, a failed exam) are tiny compared to the actual Bawaal of human suffering. The lesson? Your personal struggles might feel like a world war, but perspective is everything.