Furthermore, the Baaghi is almost exclusively male. When a woman rebels (as in Baaghi the serial), her narrative ends in death. This suggests that active rebellion is a masculine privilege; women’s rebellion is either a mental illness or a prelude to tragedy.
Conversely, in films like Baaghi 2 (2018) and Baaghi 3 (2020), the protagonist is apolitical. His rebellion triggers when a female relative (sister, lover) is kidnapped or dishonored. The antagonist is not a rival ideology but a foreign cartel or a corrupt politician. Here, the Baaghi archetype regresses to a pre-modern code of blood vengeance. His physical prowess (gymnastics, Muay Thai) replaces legal recourse. This reinforces a deeply patriarchal message: the state cannot protect women, so a hyper-masculine rogue must do so through extrajudicial violence. Baaghi
In 2016, the Bollywood film Baaghi: A Rebel for Love reintroduced the archetype to a global audience, starring Tiger Shroff as a protagonist who defies both his martial arts master and a criminal syndicate. Simultaneously, Pakistani drama Baaghi (aired on Urdu1) fictionalized the life of social media activist Qandeel Baloch, framing her defiance of patriarchal norms as a heroic, albeit tragic, rebellion. This simultaneous usage of the same signifier across two hostile nations suggests a shared subcontinental need for the Baaghi figure. This paper posits that the Baaghi is not merely a criminal or a revolutionary, but a liminal figure who exposes the failure of institutions—law, family, and state—while simultaneously reinforcing conservative structures. Furthermore, the Baaghi is almost exclusively male