A high-energy song that added to the film's musical appeal.
He gets tied to a runaway horse that charges into the enemy camp, causing panic and winning the war by default.
The phrase holds a unique place in South Asian culture, transitioning from a classic folklore character into a modern linguistic idiom and a cinematic title. Translated literally from Hindi-Urdu, it means "the khan who killed thirty." Today, the phrase is widely used across India and Pakistan as a sarcastic colloquialism to describe someone who overestimates their own bravery, intelligence, or capability.