Author: Khushi Chugh
Bollywood villains have a PhD in evil monologues, laying out their plans like a sinister PowerPoint presentation. We don't need the TED talk on evil.
Amnesia is the go-to drama spice, conveniently arriving like an express train to memory loss junction. In real life, forgetting your keys is dramatic enough.
In the Bollywood universe, emotions come with a dance routine pre-installed. Meanwhile, in reality, breaking into a song mid-conversation might end you up in a mental hospital.
Families the size of a cricket team somehow share one bathroom without any conflicts. In reality, coordinating that many relatives would be an episode of Khatron Ke Khiladi.
Falling in love, at first sight, comes with a side of extreme commitment, where the hero might consider reincarnation just for a second chance at a date.
Bollywood mothers-in-law could give Shakespearean villains a run for their money, orchestrating schemes that make these movies look like true crime documentaries.
Courtrooms are a spectacle of high-octane theatrics. Lawyers unleash impassioned speeches and reveal last-minute evidence and the judge seems to change their mind.
Using an antenna to communicate with aliens like in the movie 'Koi Mil Gaya' would be quite strange, but imagine trying to explain that to tech support.