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From being unable to become a cricketer to becoming 'Dhurandhar' filmmaker: Aditya Dhar's inspiring journey

etimes.in | Last updated on - Mar 26, 2026, 12:07 IST
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1/7

Aditya Dhar's extraordinary journey of resilience

Long before he was winning National Awards, filmmaker Aditya Dhar was just another Delhi kid with a cricket bat and a dream that had nothing to do with cinema. His story is a powerful reminder that sometimes, life has a better plan for you for which it breaks your "Plan A" into pieces.

Now, with his film 'Dhurandhar' breaking records, lets look back at Aditya Dhar's extraordinary success.

2/7

A crushed dream: Not being selected in the Indian cricket team

Aditya’s first love wasn't a camera—it was the pitch. He spent his youth training to wear the Indian blue, playing serious junior-level cricket. But a brutal mix of injury and the messy reality of sports politics killed that dream early. To the world, he was "retired hurt" before the game even really started, as per Humans of Bombay.

3/7

Finding a voice in the noise

School wasn't a sanctuary, either. Struggling with dyslexia meant that traditional textbooks felt like a foreign language. But where the classroom failed him, the raw, dusty stages of Delhi’s college theatre saved him. Without a script or a safety net, he learned the most important skill a director can have: How to actually connect with a living, breathing audience.

4/7

The 12-year "Ghost" hustle

When he moved to Mumbai in 2006, he had zero connections and no "Filmy Godfather." He spent over a decade in the shadows, working as a "Dhurandhar" (a master) behind the scenes—ghostwriting lyrics, fixing dialogues, and surviving "development hell" where projects would be announced with fanfare only to vanish overnight. He wasn't just waiting for a break; he was sharpening his tools in the dark.

5/7

'Uri' and the Serbian gamble

In 2019, he finally got his shot as a filmmaker with 'Uri: The Surgical Strike'. Because he was a first-time director, the budget was tight and the pressure was immense. He took the crew to the freezing terrains of Serbia to make every rupee look like a million. It didn't just work—it changed the national conversation and proved he belonged in the big leagues.

6/7

The "One-Hit Wonder" whispers

Between 2019 and 2025, things went quiet. The industry started whispering: "Was Aditya just a one-hit wonder?" Projects faced roadblocks, and the hype began to fade. But Aditya wasn't disappearing; he was evolving. He spent those "missing years" obsessing over his craft, and honing it. He refused to put out anything that didn't feel 100% honest and the rest, as they say, is history.


7/7

2025: The 'Dhurandhar' homecoming

When he returned in 2025 with 'Dhurandhar', it wasn't just a movie. It was a masterpiece! He poured every rejection and every late-night struggle into that film. It didn't need "item songs" or gimmicks to work. It connected because it was real. Becoming the fourth-highest-grossing Indian film of all time was just the cherry on top; the real win was the respect he earned by staying true to his vision.

Aditya Dhar’s journey proves that you don't need a famous last name to build a kingdom—you just need a heart that refuses to stay down.


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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 10.35AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service