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Like many big-ticket films, 'Chennai Express' was not without its share of trouble. Before its release, the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) threatened to disrupt screenings. The party was upset because the Rohit Shetty-directed film was reportedly demanding prime-time slots in single-screen theaters at the expense of a successful Marathi film, 'Duniyadari'. The issue was eventually resolved after director Rohit Shetty met with MNS chief Raj Thackeray.

As the primary antagonist, Dheer provided a formidable physical threat, making the final confrontation both high-stakes and impactful. Cultural Confluence and Director's Vision Chennai Express

For a film titled Chennai Express , very little of it is set in Chennai (mostly shot in Kerala and Mumbai). The Tamil characters speak heavily accented, often gibberish Tamil (Deepika Padukone learned her lines phonetically). The portrayal of South Indians – loud, wearing vibhuti (sacred ash), speaking in broken Hindi – relies on broad, sometimes lazy stereotypes. For many Tamil viewers, it felt like a “North Indian’s idea of South India.” Like many big-ticket films, 'Chennai Express' was not

The Phenomenon of Chennai Express: How a Chaotic Train Journey Redefined Modern Masala Cinema The issue was eventually resolved after director Rohit