In an exciting atmosphere, this movie centers around the transformation of the Singh family that consists of Shamsher, the father, his son, Sikandar, and twins, Suraj and Surjana, who run an illegal business of trade and arms, from one hand family, to enemies, after Sikandar had met Jessica, who tricks him and makes him fight his family.
Not that Race and Race 2 were classics, but Race 3 has taken things too far. Remo D'Souza's idea of a dysfunctional family is far more juvenile than Abbas-Mustan's.
The wafer-thin plot that skims through illegal arms and drug dealings feels like a joke. Even the allure of Khan going shirtless or watching catfights unfurl cannot save this inglorious mess.
For all its big moments, Race 3 just does not work up the feeling of suspense and intrigue that made the previous masala movies from the franchise a guilty pleasure.