Raees May 2026

Yet, Raees finds its soul in the quiet moments: his arranged marriage to the sharp, principled Aasiya (Mahira Khan), who becomes his moral compass, and his eventual realization that empires built on blood and liquor eventually drown in it. The film ends not with a triumphant bang, but with a weary, almost Shakespearean acceptance of fate.

Opposite him is the relentless police officer Majmudar (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), a cat-and-mouse force of nature who understands that to catch a monster, you must think like one. Their ideological clashes—order vs. chaos, law vs. necessity—form the film’s tense spine. Yet, Raees finds its soul in the quiet

Here’s a short write-up on (2017), the Bollywood crime drama directed by Rahul Dholakia and starring Shah Rukh Khan. Raees: The Man, the Myth, the Bootlegger Set against the arid, politically charged landscape of 1980s Gujarat, Raees is more than a gangster film—it’s a shrewd commentary on power, caste, and the skewed morality of a system that creates its own villains. At its core is Raees Alam (Shah Rukh Khan), a boy who grows up internalizing a brutal lesson: "Business is just business, no matter how many people get crushed under its wheels." Their ideological clashes—order vs