Jannat 2

The story follows Sonu Dilli, a street-smart, small-time arms dealer in Delhi who has the gift of gab.

Although helping Pratap puts Sonu in jail for a little time, he continues to purvey the ACP with information about illegal arms rackets as he has no other choice.

But when Sonu falls in love with Dr. Jhanvi Singh Tomar and manages to woo her, he wants to leave the life of crime and settle down.

However, Pratap, who is hell bent upon finding who the leader of the arms racket is, persuades Sonu to continue being his informer by promising him protection and a good life afterward.

Pratap, seeing Sonu get killed, shoots the chief commissioner and Mangal multiple times, leading to their deaths.

[citation needed] Mumbai based writer Kapil Chopra filed a case in 2012 against Bhatts for stealing his script for Jannat 2.

[2] The music of Jannat 2 is composed by Pritam, with lyrics penned by Sayeed Qadri and Sanjay Masoomm while the title song of the film was written by Mayur Puri.

A genre album which has love forming an integral part of the affairs, it ensures that each of the songs complement each other in a seamless manner.

An absorbing story, a swift and coherent narrative, exemplary direction, fantastic action, soothing music and stellar performances summarize the highlights of this triumphant franchise.

"[8] Gaurav Malani of Economic Times gave the film 4/5 stars, stating that "Overlook a few of its sinful indulgences and Jannat 2 can turn out to be a hell of a ride!

"[9] Madhureeta Mukherjee of The Times of India gave the film 3/5 stars, stating that "Jannat 2 is a decent crime caper, but doesn't shoot you between the eyes.

"[10] Rajeev Masand of IBNLive gave the film 2.5/5 stars, concluding that "I'm going with two-and-a-half out of five for director Kunal Deshmukh's Jannat 2.

"[12] Zee News gave the film 2/5 stars, stating that "Watch Jannat 2 for its catchy numbers (better still, buy a CD!).

A couple of chase sequences, particularly one through the arteries of a Dargah, are slickly shot, but even these lose their charm as they get needlessly long-winded.