A perfect and beautiful documentary film with a realistic spy story (with an "edge-of-the-seat" feel for the audience similar to 'The Ghazi Attack' from the same director) having no-nonsense like unnecessary item numbers, or forced female leads and love-stories, or even unrealistic fighting action which untrained actors (so-called heroes of bollywood) are known for repeatedly doing.
If the public isn't watching this film in theatres, then it's a shere "hypothetical" public who sheds crocodile tears over the death of great talents like Sushant – but simultaneously does not support a brilliantly talented outsider (Vidyut Jammwal) when he is still alive.
Vidyut Jammwal is an internationally high ranked (among world's Top-10) martial artist. He still DOES NOT use that skill in this particular film despite being the producer, rather aces it through his shere acting (a quality that is clearly absent in star-kids like Tiger Shroff who is a mere stuntman with no improvement at his acting department, still continues being over-pampered by the nepo-industry).
Vidyut Jammwal is being criminally underrated and getting ignored by the so-called mainstream people (including mainstream film-reviewers). I'm sure of one thing: Vidyut Jammwal is the next big thing in India, if the public stops being hypocrite.