RGV is a director who consistently displays his quirkiness by claiming that he makes movies and it is up to the audience to decide whether or not to watch them. Additionally, he asserts that people will never watch a film if the producers urge them to. He recently released the movie Dangerous. He began generating significant hungama in the form of interviews on numerous networks a week before the actual release.
His office staff members rushed behind certain channels to interview him while others approached him for interviews. In his own distinctive manner, RGV recorded an interview with Ashu Reddy. Dangerous is a movie about two girls. The campaign was unorthodox, and the posters were deceptive. Despite all of this, nobody cared, at least not on social media. The entrances were awful. At least four movies that were released this weekend have reviews.
However, hardly one cared about this senior director's movie. He would have made some money had he made the movie available for rent on YouTube. Otherwise, he might have broadcast it on his ATT platform, where he showed his movies throughout the shutdown. Nothing about Dangerous and its advertising improved his image but shrinking himself during interviews that drew harsh criticism.