@AmazonHelp Return requested
Replacement Order : XYZ
Replacement requested on: Jun 29, 2026
does this mean i get a replacement of the defective piece? i don't see any date of delivery
@amazon@amazonIN no one came to deliver me the replacement for my product, and the tracking shows 'Item marked as rejected by you - returning to the seller.' I have a defective product, without the refund or the replacement
@Swiggy my order has been '2 mins' away for the past 30 minutes. the delivery guy has not moved, not picking up the call. i do NOT want to talk to your useless AI chatbot.
I hardly go to theatres these days. Over the years, Bollywood’s overuse of propaganda, cheap CGI, and recycled stories has completely turned me off. Most movies feel soulless now, just spectacle for the sake of spectacle.
But I went for Kantara Chapter 1, thanks to the mega hype. And honestly, it changed everything.
After a very long time, I walked out of a theatre genuinely impressed, maybe even a little moved. This is easily one of the best films I’ve seen in the last 10–15 years.
For once, the war sequences felt real. Not actors pasted onto green screens, not lazy VFX-stuffed battlefields. When you see a tiger on screen, you really see a tiger. It’s Life of Pi–level craft! You can see people actually fighting in the background. Everything is shot, not simulated. The sets feel alive and authentic, nothing like the overly polished, fake-looking backdrops we’re used to.
Every detail looks researched, rooted in reality, and beautifully executed. That’s what sets Kantara Chapter 1 apart. It doesn’t try to copy Hollywood or follow Bollywood formulas. And that’s just the visual side, don’t even get me started on the story, which is a whole discussion on its own.