Salman Khan DELETES His Laapataa Ladies Review Hours After He Got Trolled, Shares This Instead – News18

Salman Khan reviews Kiran Rao's Laapataa Ladies again.

Salman Khan reviews Kiran Rao’s Laapataa Ladies again.

Salman Khan has shared another review of Kiran Rao’s Lapataa Ladies after his earlier goof up.

Salman Khan has shared a corrected version of his review of Kiran Rao’s Laapataa Ladies. He had earlier shared a review of Kiran Rao’s latest release. Salman took to X, previously known as Twitter, and said that he loved the film. Salman said he watched it with his father, Salim Khan, and he too liked the film. However, his review featured a big mistake. Salman confused Laapataa Ladies as Kiran’s directorial debut whereas the filmmaker made her debut with Dhobi Ghat in 2010.

Salman’s review now reads, “Just saw Kiran Rao’s Laapataa Ladies. Wah wah Kiran. I really enjoyed it and so did my father. superb job. Kab kaam karogi mere saath?” Check it out here:

Salman’s earlier post led to several social media users schooling him about his mistake. They reminded him that Dhobi Ghat was Kiran Rao’s first film and even pointed out that Salman attended the premiere. The actor has thus shared a corrected version of the post.

Laapataa Ladies has received impressive reviews from the critics. The film is set in the rural backdrop of the fictional Nirmal Pradesh. The narrative opens in a second-class train car with a number of recently married couples making their way to their separate villages. The brides are all wearing long ghunghats, or veils, covering their faces. After hurriedly stepping off the train and avoiding the night’s darkness, Deepak (Sparsh Shrivastava) takes his wife’s hand and heads toward his village only to realise he has left behind the woman he has married and dragged home the wrong bride. All hell breaks loose.

News18 gave the film a 4-star rating and wrote, “Rao manages to intertwine all these stories and juxtapose them with one another at right junctions, without being too in-your-face about it. The subtlety works beautifully as the stark contrast in each of the characters’ lives unfolds. The best part about the film is that it doesn’t make women feel victimised or play the victim card. Laapataa Ladies is a film which should be celebrated by every gender. In the season of big screen larger-than-life entertainers, Rao’s film comes across as refreshing and turns out to be a clear winner.”