Dragon aur Dulhan (The Dragon and the Bride)
Rohan travels to Beijing for a "Hindi-China Film Friendship Festival" as part of a stunt team showcasing a silly action film called Dosti Ka Toofan . At the festival, he wears a costume resembling a forgotten warrior, "Veer Singh the Dragon," who (in a fictional crossover legend) once saved a Chinese village. hindi china movie
The climax happens during the actual film shoot at the Great Wall. Li Wei and his men attack mid-scene, thinking the fight is fake. Rohan — now half-trained, half-improvised — uses a mix of bhangra kicks, mirror reflections from a broken phone screen (a nod to Dhoom style), and one perfectly executed Shaolin palm strike taught by Mei to defeat the goons. Mei retrieves the pendant, but not before Rohan saves her from a collapsing scaffold using a "hero rope swing" he learned from Bollywood rigging. Dragon aur Dulhan (The Dragon and the Bride)
By pure accident, Li Wei’s men mistake Rohan for the real guardian of the pendant. After a chase through a night market (where Rohan accidentally flips a noodle cart using a bad kick), Mei Lin saves him. She is furious — but realizes Rohan’s striking resemblance to the warrior in the old murals could be useful. Li Wei and his men attack mid-scene, thinking
When a broke, small-town Bollywood stuntman is mistaken for a legendary Chinese warrior during a film festival in Beijing, he must team up with a no-nonsense kung fu master to stop a real-life artifact heist — all while shooting a fake action scene that becomes dangerously real.
Reluctantly, Mei trains Rohan in basic kung fu, but Rohan keeps adding Bollywood-style dance moves and slow-motion expressions. “Why stare intensely when you can sing about it first?” he asks. Mei deadpans: “Because the villain doesn’t wait for the chorus.”