The reason for this is a very old trend or fascination that Bollywood has encouraged since the 1970s. Bollywood always portrays villains unrealistically. They should dress up very gorgeously and perform various stunts to give the impression that he is not a flesh-and-blood villain but some kind of superhuman. Bollywood has been showing this fantasy in various movies for a long time. At the same time, the heroes began to be given a very different look from the 1970s era, as if the heroes were as superhuman as the villains. Bollywood’s fascination with villains started in the ’70s and ’80s, mainly with Amitabh Bachchan-starrer films. As you can see in films like Deewaar (1975), Don (1978), etc., the villain started to be portrayed as a weird caricature, which was later copied in different ways in other Bollywood commercial films. The villain, or hero, used to say things that a normal criminal or social justifier might not say. In this way, Bollywood started to distort the mentality of the audience in different parts of the country. There has always been a boom in Hindi mass films, especially in North and Central India. Naturally, various deformed ideas about what a hero should be and what a villain should be started to develop after witnessing and becoming accustomed to these misrepresentations, the impact of which we may still be carrying.