Arjun downshifts. At T+3.5 seconds, he yanks the handbrake, spinning the taxi 180 degrees. The enemy SUV rams an auto-rickshaw instead. The explosion is a firework of oranges and mangos.

The HUD scans the car.

"HUD4U," Arjun whispers. "New plan. Track my heartbeat."

He walks towards Bhai, unarmed. The HUD begins a countdown.

Arjun tosses the fire extinguisher out the window. It spirals in slow motion (the HD makes every dent visible) and smashes into the bike’s tank. The bike cartwheels off the flyover, exploding against a billboard of a Tamil movie star.

"Arjun Varma," Bhai laughs. "I watched you run away. You're good at that."

Arjun rips the trigger from Bhai's hand. He crushes it. Then he looks at the HUD. "Mission complete. Log me out."

She was never a hostage. She was the bomb.

Logline: A disgraced RAW agent, now a cab driver in Chennai, is reactivated via a secret HUD delivered through his windshield to stop a South Indian arms syndicate from selling a stolen weapon of mass destruction.

The HUD flickers. A final, ghostly image of Kavya smiles at him. Then it fades to black.

They ditch the burning taxi. The HUD projects a new objective:

The screen flickers in HD. Every drop of sweat on Agent Arjun Varma’s (Rana Daggubati) face is crystal clear. We see his POV: a chaotic street in Tbilisi, Georgia. His HUD—a tactical overlay projected onto his contact lens—is glitching red.

The HUD pings. Four black SUVs with tinted windows screech around the corner, their headlights like white-hot suns.

They reach the abandoned airport. The syndicate leader, a man with a lion's mane of white hair named "Bhai" (Prakash Raj), stands beside a private jet. He holds a trigger linked to the Rudra Core.

He gets to Zara. He doesn't disarm the vest. He holds her hand.