On screen, it is all power and paranoia—arched corridors echoing with footsteps, glass walls framing quiet tension, and a sprawling Karachi mansion that signals the rise of a man who has everything to lose. Off screen, however, this same house sits far from Lyari’s dense sprawl, tucked instead into the calmer, greener rhythms of Amritsar. In one of the most talked-about reveals surrounding "Dhurandhar: The Revenge," the lavish bungalow that audiences believed belonged to Hamza Ali Mazari is, in reality, a design-forward luxury residence in Punjab named Ananda. And in that revelation lies a story that is as much about cinema as it is about architecture, illusion, and the quiet brilliance of Indian locations doubling for somewhere else entirely.


