The tech park is built—but on the other side of the nallah. Bauji’s colony becomes a heritage zone. His auto-rickshaw is now a tourist attraction. Choti quits the call center and starts a "Museum of Lost Maps."
It is 2041. The government has officially renamed the capital's sprawling, unplanned suburbs "Delhi-2." Here, gleaming AI-controlled monorails zip over streets still clogged with hand-pulled carts. Huge holographic gods advertise real estate while children play cricket in the shadows of demolition drones. delhi 2 movie
Bauji smiles, pats his auto. "Beta, Delhi is not a city. It's a conversation. And this auto? It’s the grammar." The tech park is built—but on the other side of the nallah
Logline: In a near-future Delhi-2—a hyper-capitalist, hologram-lit extension of the old city—an aging auto-rickshaw driver named Bauji is given a "relocation order" to make way for a glass-domed tech park. To save his home, he must find a mythical forgotten map hidden in the city's underground archives, aided only by a cynical street-smart girl and a corrupt politician who suddenly grows a conscience. Choti quits the call center and starts a
Bauji’s first ally is (a corrupt, overweight local politician who has sold out his own community thrice over). Tijori is having a crisis: his AI health monitor just predicted he will die of loneliness in 11 days because no one, not even his paid friends, will attend his funeral. Desperate for a legacy, he agrees to help Bauji, provided he gets a "photo op" finding the map.
One morning, a sleek, black-suited official hands him a notice. "Your khamba (pillar) number 7-Ashta. Demolition in seven days. The Lotus Tower Tech Park will rise here."
Bauji (70), whose real name is Paramjeet Singh, has driven his green-and-yellow auto-rickshaw, "Shaktimaan," for 45 years. The auto is a relic—no GPS, no electric hum, just a roaring, smoke-belching engine that he tunes with a wrench and a prayer. His neighborhood, "Purani Dilli-2," is a labyrinth of unauthorized colonies slated for "beautification."