Ranveer Singh's Hamza in Aditya Dhar's Dhurandhar embodies the spy's ultimate betrayal: not to the enemy, but to himself. As an Indian agent infiltrating Pakistan's ISI, Hamza marries a politician's daughter — not for love, but for access into the murky world of crime. Every act of love, every whispered promise is a calculated ploy, eroding his sense of self. He loses his personal identity. The undercover work turns emotions into weapons. Dhurandhar spotlights a quiet devastation: bonds forged in deception leave spies adrift, questioning if any connection can ever feel real again. It's the erasure of authentic intimacy, where vulnerability becomes a liability. IndiaToday.in delves into the loneliness and personal isolation of spies depicted in Indian cinema.

Dhurandhar's Hamza: When

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