@AxisBankSupport You are copy pasting the same message. And do not call my father's number again please. He is already fed up with this spamming that he stopped taking any calls.
@AxisBank My elderly parents are getting constant spam calls from Axis Bank credit card team asking to reopen a credit card closed 10-15 years ago with due process. Is there any complaint process other than raising it to ombudsman?
@AxisBankSupport Your team is not helping at all. After taking almost a month you came back with nothing. Without the proof of any spending or bill or any details how can you harass elderly citizens?? This is too much!
#axisbank#axisbankcreditcards
@ApurbaMohaptra@rapidobikeapp@INCKarnataka Same all over Bangalore. It took me 2 hours to travel from Whitefield to Bellandur. Was trying to guess why the traffic has suddenly doubled since yesterday. Now I get the answer. Thanks!
I hope Bollywood isn’t planning a movie on Op Sindoor.
Firstly, Military films shouldn’t be made immediately after a war. Most details are still classified and will remain so for decades. Making a film based only on what’s already publicly available serves little purpose, unless the goal is only to milk sentiments and make money.
Secondly, most in bollywood don't have the craft for a military movie. A brilliant Op like Op Sindoor deserves treatment like Zero Dark Thirty, Saving Private Ryan, or Black Hawk Down, not a masala film with over the top melodrama and forced emotions.
When films exaggerate sentiment, they lose authenticity. Military films should focus on operations, tactics, and realism, not melodrama or emotional overkill. Soldiers don’t break into songs before breaching a room, and battles aren’t paused for love stories. Great war movies earn emotional impact by staying grounded in the reality of combat, using emotion to support the mission, not overshadow it.
Uri is the closest to perfection we’ve got. It got the emotional tone right, showing just enough to make the stakes personal without slipping into melodrama. The feelings were sharp but brief. It respected the soldier’s reality, using emotion to support the mission, not overshadow it.