Something deeply unsettling is playing out online, and Varun Dhawan has become its latest target. In the days leading up to Border 2, there should have been normal anticipation and healthy conversation. Instead, it has turned into a flood of oddly coordinated negativity. This negativity is so repetitive and personal that it no longer feels organic.

What makes this moment disturbing is not criticism itself, but the nature of it. The conversation about Varun Dhawan has gone from his work into demeaning territory. Instead of discussing the performance they are yet to watch, audiences focus on commentary about his height. They also obsess over his facial expressions and physicality. This is often laced with mockery and crude language. This blatant character assassination now seems to be a targeted attack as per reports on Reddit.

Hate campaign against Varun Dhawan
Hate campaign against Varun Dhawan

A leaked message circulating online exposes how easily “hate” can be manufactured. A circular doing the rounds appears to show a pitch for paid collaboration. It explicitly encourages creators to push a negative narrative against Varun Dhawan. This is done under the guise of critical film commentary. The language suggested is designed to ridicule and spread contempt while pretending to be opinion.

Varun Dhawan is facing what seems to be a calculated campaign driven by engagement economics. Because Outrage sells, cruelty trends and tearing down a mainstream star becomes an easy way to make money online.

Varun Dhawan Boarder 2 Poster
Varun Dhawan Boarder 2 Poster

The irony is that Varun is an actor who has consistently shown range, evolving with each project. Very early on in his career, he surprised audiences with Badlapur and later, October. His movies are both blockbusters like Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania series and critically acclaimed like Sui Dhaaga. And today, he is being reduced to punchlines instead of being judged on performance.

There’s also something deeply hypocritical about how the same industry that celebrates “real conversations” turns a blind eye to this.

Varun Dhawan has earned his place through years of work. Negativity orchestrated through lazy, paid outrage pretending to be honesty needs to stop. This is important not just for Varun Dhawan but for the future of film discourse itself.