RajenReflects

How Akshaye Khanna Changed the Villain Playbook

When was the last time you watched a film where the villain became bigger than the hero?

Not louder, bloodier, but bigger. Where the final showdown arrived, the music swelled, the hero struck… and somewhere deep inside, you didn’t want the villain to die. That moment — when your moral compass wobbles just a little — that’s when cinema does something extraordinary.

Every few decades, a film comes along that flips the script. The villain doesn’t just dominate the screen. He dominates the conversation. In the last 50 years of Hindi cinema, I experienced this just thrice.

1975: When Fear Ruled

Sholay: A film so iconic it became folklore.

Amjad Khan’s Gabbar Singh wasn’t just a villain; he was an event. The menacing laughter. The pauses.

The silence between words that felt louder than gunshots.

He shattered the stereotype of the cardboard cut-out bad guy. He was terrifying. He was unforgettable.

But he was never lovable; when Gabbar died, the audience clapped.

Justice was restored. Order returned. The villain had done his job.

1998: When the Villain Felt Human

Then came Satya.

Ram Gopal Varma’s gritty world gave us a protagonist who was sincere, intense, and convincing. But standing beside him was Bhiku Mhatre, played by Manoj Bajpayee—and something shifted.

Bhiku wasn’t pure evil. He was volatile, loyal, funny, and tragic. He felt like someone whom life had cornered.

This time, when the villain died, the applause stopped.

The audience felt a lump in its throat. Because Bhiku no longer felt like a villain. He felt… relatable.

2025: When the Villain Transcended the Role

And then came Dhurandhar.

Surrounded by a formidable cast — Ranveer Singh, Sanjay Dutt, R. Madhavan, Rakesh Bedi (all of whom played their part admirably) —few expected Akshaye Khanna to emerge as the axis around which the film would turn.

But he did.

Playing Rehman Dakait, a Pakistani mafia don with blood on his hands and terror in his wake, Akshaye did something rare. He didn’t demand attention. He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t overplay a single moment. Instead, he withdrew. A flicker of the eye. A half-smile. A stillness that made others lean in. And suddenly, the theatre belonged to him.

The Counterintuitive Truth

This shouldn’t have worked.

Rehman Dakait is a deeply problematic character—someone who arms terrorists and fuels chaos. On paper, there’s nothing redeemable here.

Yet audiences didn’t talk about Rehman. They spoke of Akshaye Khanna. That’s the shift.

Gabbar Singh became Gabbar.

Bhiku Mhatre became Bhiku.

But Rehman Dakait somehow dissolved; what remained was the actor.

That’s the difference.

A collage containing pictures of three of the most impactful villains in the last 50 years
The 3 most impactful villains in 50 years

How Did He Do It?

Was it charm, swag, good looks, or restraint? Maybe all of it. But more than anything, it was control. Here’s an example that explains it best: Think of a speaker who whispers in a room full of people shouting. You lean in. You listen harder.

Akshaye whispered.

While others performed, he inhabited.

And that’s why even the film’s creator, Aditya Dhar, reportedly couldn’t have anticipated the avalanche of love that followed.

This wasn’t hype. It was recognition.

What This Says About Us

Why do we remember these villains?

Because they reflect something we don’t like to admit:

  • 1

    We’re drawn to complexity.
  • 2

    We’re intrigued by restraint.
  • 3

    We respect confidence that doesn’t announce itself.

In life, too, the loudest person isn’t always the most powerful. The most dangerous person isn’t always the most violent. And the most impressive presence isn’t always the one seeking applause. Sometimes, it’s the one who doesn’t need it.

The Final Act

Amjad Khan will always be remembered as Gabbar. Manoj Bajpayee will forever carry Bhiku Mhatre. But Akshaye Khanna?

He walks away as himself.

And that might be the highest compliment cinema can offer.

Because when the curtain falls, and the noise fades, what stays with us isn’t who won, but who owned the moment without trying to. That’s not just great acting.

That’s mastery.

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About Me

I am a thinker at all times. I see, I think. I hear, I think. I read, I think. Every weekend I write. I would love to know what you think.

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Rahul Malhotra
Rahul Malhotra
2 months ago

I Always Saying Sir Admire You & Inspiration For Me Through ✍️✍️✍️✍️ Thanks So Much For Everything Sir. I’m leaving Very Soon Sir 👍👏👏 Thanks For Everything Sir🙏🤝🙏
Regards
Rahul Aaru Malhotra