The 10 Best Bollywood Movies of 2022

Even though Bollywood lovers are happy to be back in the cinemas, the best Bollywood movies of 2022 left viewers decidedly lukewarm in terms of excitement when going back to watch Hindi cinema on the big screen. This was, of course, also the year of RRR, the Telugu-language film that created a huge buzz inside India and abroad, setting all sorts of box-office records in its wake. The exuberance with which the film has been received outside of India was bemusing to South Asian critics, who don’t quite understand what the whole song and dance is about. (See what I did there?) Meanwhile, Hindi-language cinema continued its recent cycle of some movies that missed the mark of delivering a well-seasoned masala plot and a handful that perked our senses.
Here is the good, the bad, and the ugly of Bollywood films in 2022, summed up in 10 movies:
Tales of infidelity aren’t new to Bollywood—so much so that there’s a blurring between real and reel lives. Mahesh Bhatt’s seminal Arth (1982) was inspired by his own messy marriage, while Silsila (1981) continues to enthrall people in the way the movie cast the real life triangle of Amitabh and Jaya Bachchan alongside Rekha.
There were a lot of expectations around a contemporary look at marriage and infidelity in Gehraiyaan, especially since director Shakun Batra had delivered a wonderfully complex dysfunctional family in Kapoor & Sons (2016). The trailer starring Deepika Padukone, Ananya Panday and Siddhant Chaturvedi, with Dhairya Karwa barely making the cut, suggested a moody look at modern love. Set to the throbbing song “Doobey” (throatily sung by Lothika), it showcased an earthy and Instagram-worthy backdrop against which very good-looking people cavort with each other.
Gehraiyaan is lovely to look at. Its aesthetic is clearly aimed at the upper-upper-middle class and nouveau riche, the script boasting one character with a peak Bollywood job of cheese farmer. But there’s not much profundity to the film that purports to trawl the depths of the lies we tell each other and ourselves. Deepika’s character Alisha is a yoga instructor who seriously needs to focus more on her inhales and exhales, especially since she keeps going on about “feeling stuck.” Only Ananya Panday, playing sort-of rich brat Tia, adds some heft to the movie, likely because she appears comfortable in a role not unlike her real life. Gehraiyaan was truly a disappointment because some of the points it was trying to make around realities and perceptions in long-term relationships and short-term flings could have made for a compelling story.
Badhaai Do
At the moment, there are two stars well-known in Bollywood for their unlikely stardom and penchant for doing offbeat films: Rajkummar Rao and Ayushmann Khurrana. This movie is not to be confused with Badhaai Do, which stars Ayushmann as a young man of marriageable age whose parents throw a minor wrench in the works by getting knocked up themselves. Instead Badhaai Do is another, more or less welcome addition, to Hindi cinema’s sudden interest in queer love stories.
Shardul Thakur (Rajkummar Rao) is a cop who loves to flex his muscles, and has a lot riding on his mardana (hyper masculine) image—especially since he’s gay and in the closet. To the chagrin of his family, he’s not interested in getting married. Suman Singh (Bhumi Pednekar) is a physical education teacher (commonly known in India as PT teacher) who also does not want to get married, and is a lesbian—also not out to her loved ones. Shardul suggests to Suman that the two of them should get married to shut their families up.
The arrangement works at the beginning. However, chinks soon start appearing in this marriage of convenience, especially when their parents start making pointed references to their expectations of becoming grandparents soon. Badhaai Do works because of Rao and Pednekar’s commitment to their characters. It also helps when the leads are rounded out by a solid ensemble cast now well-recognized in these contemporary family dramas. Sheeba Chaddha as a scatterbrained widowed mother to her macho cop son is especially a standout.
Gangubai Kathiawadi
It’s been a while since a Sanjay Leela Bhansali historical spectacle has wowed me. The sumptuousness of Bajirao Mastani was followed by the disappointment of Padmaavat. Both movies boasted Ranvir Singh and Deepika Padukone, and a soft saffron agenda—given that both films were “inspired” by history, and depicted Muslims as brutal and brutish invaders who went about marauding Indian kings and queens.
Gangubai Kathiawadi takes a page from a much more recent chapter of Indian history. It’s set in post-independence India, when the country was just about finding its feet. Also finding feet, or rather her place, was Gangubai, a brothel owner credited with advocating for the rights of prostitutes to educate their children and get more respect in society. The film tells the story of the rise of Gangubai, who was sold into a brothel at a young age and grows up to fight for women’s equity. Alia Bhatt is luminous in the titular role. Bhansali films are known for their color palettes and as Gangubai, Alia is outfitted in white saris, a big red bindi adorning her forehead. The young actress is able to bring a gravitas to the role, without veering into melodrama.
Darlings
With this film, Alia Bhatt added her name to the growing list of women producers in Bollywood. In this new role, Bhatt says she hopes to be able bring new stories and voices to the screen, especially on streaming platforms. From the moment she read the script for Darlings, she knew this was a perfect project for Netflix.
Bhatt is a part of an ensemble cast who have shone in different projects in the last few years. She plays Badrunissa, a sweet young lower middle class woman, married to Hamza (Vijay Varma), a ticket collector on Mumbai’s transit system. Hamza is a decent husband but has a propensity for violence after a drink. Badru’s mother Shamsunissa (Shefali Shah) keeps urging her daughter to leave Hamza, and sometimes enlists the help of Zulfi (Roshan Mathew) in trying to talk some sense into her. But things take an unpredictable turn after an accident.
Darlings manages to deliver a dark comedy for the most part. It’s a treat to watch actors such as Varma (who was an amazing discovery in Gully Boy) and Shah (who does an admirable job as deputy commissioner of police Vartika Chaturvedi in the Delhi Crime series) squabble in their domestic situations. The scenes where Badru and Shamsu go to the police station to report a crime are also a riot because of the delivery by Vijay Maurya (also a writer on this film) as Inspector Tawde. It’s clear the cast and crew had fun making the film. However, Darlings does play it a little too safe and too cute for its own good at times.
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- movies The 50 Best Movies on Hulu Right Now (September 2025) By Paste Staff September 12, 2025 | 5:50am
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