90s Superstar, That Guy From That Forrest Gump Remake: How Does Gen Z See Aamir Khan?

As Junaid Khan and Ira Khan's father? As that 'old' actor from the advertisement featuring Indian cricketers and Ranbir Kapoor? As the chocolate-faced actor whose song Pehla Nasha is all over Instagram reels? Or as the man who wore a turban and ran through India in Laal Singh Chaddha, his last film on the big screen?
How exactly does Gen Z, the generation that was still in its infancy when Aamir rose to fame, see the superstar today?

For a generation raised on snappy 10-second reels and streaming platforms that offer an endless buffet of content, Aamir Khan is a name that exists somewhere between nostalgia and fading relevance.
He isn't their Tiger Shroff, nor is he the "OG" Shah Rukh Khan, whose romantic films still make hearts flutter.

Aamir Khan is something else entirely - a shadow from the past, a name their parents revere, an actor who once dictated box office numbers but now finds himself in a tricky space where admiration is laced with indifference.
Recommended
The Last Of The "Perfectionist" Superstar?
For millennials, Aamir Khan was the thinking man's superstar, the actor who gave them 3 Idiots at a time when their biggest fear was board exams and PK when they were grappling with existential questions.

But for Gen Z, Aamir is someone who peaked before they could fully experience his magic in real-time. Sure, they've heard of Dangal (2016), probably watched it on TV during a lazy Sunday afternoon, but it doesn't hold the same emotional weight for them as it did for their older siblings.
His last universally adored film, Dangal, came out when the eldest of Gen Z were barely out of school. It wasn't just a sports drama, it was a cultural moment.
It gave them Haanikaarak Bapu, a song their parents sang whenever they imposed study hours. It made wrestling look cool and it had the feminist undertone that aligned with the times.

And yet, ask a Gen Z teenager about Aamir Khan, and you'll likely get a half-hearted "Oh yeah, the guy from Dangal?" before they return to discussing the latest OTT thriller or K-pop sensations.
Then came Thugs of Hindostan (2018), a film that should have been a spectacle but ended up as a meme-fest. By then, Gen Z had moved on. They weren't waiting in long queues outside cinema halls like their parents once did for Ghajini or 3 Idiots.

They were watching superhero films, getting hooked to web series and discovering world cinema on Netflix.
The Laal Singh Chaddha Phenomenon - Was It Or Was It Not?
In 2022, Aamir Khan attempted a grand comeback with Laal Singh Chaddha, a film that should have been his Forrest Gump moment but turned into a cautionary tale about Bollywood's changing landscape.

Gen Z, never one to hold back on opinions, didn't quite buy into the nostalgia. The slow-motion running, the wide-eyed innocence, things that once made Aamir endearing, felt outdated. Memes flooded the internet. "Why is he making the same expressions as in PK?" they asked.
More than the film itself, what dominated conversations was how the actor had failed to read the room. The industry was shifting, storytelling was evolving and he was still chasing the formula that worked a decade ago. To a generation raised on authenticity and relatability, his larger-than-life sincerity felt... scripted.
Aamir Khan: The Reel Legacy
Yet, despite the growing disconnect, Aamir Khan refuses to be erased. His legacy survives in the most unexpected places - Instagram reels set to Pehla Nasha, Gen Z influencers referencing Rancho's Aal Izz Well when life feels chaotic and the occasional rediscovery of Dil Chahta Hai as a coming-of-age classic.

His contribution to Bollywood remains undeniable, even if his relevance in contemporary pop culture is under negotiation.
So, who is Aamir Khan to Gen Z? A legend they know of but don't actively seek out? A meme-worthy relic from their childhood? Or a master storyteller waiting for his next reinvention?
Perhaps the answer lies somewhere in between. After all, if there's one thing Aamir has proved time and again, it's that he knows how to surprise. The question is - will Gen Z still be watching when he does?
-
He Was At 'Ground Zero' In Kashmir - Inside Story Of Ghazi Baba Encounter
Narendra Nath Dhar Dubey, a key figure in the operation to kill Ghazi Baba, spoke to NDTV, sharing the untold story of the encounter and how his shirt saved his life.
-
NDTV Explains: India's Rs 63,000 Crore Rafale M Fighter Deal. What Is It, Why Is It Important
Thirty-six C variant of the Rafale fighter jets, the last of which delivered was in December last year, are currently operated by the Indian Air Force.
-
Opinion | Is The Vatican Ready For A Black Pope?
Many Catholics in Africa are asking whether the next Pope will be from their continent. This, increasingly, seems likely. Names like Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana or Cardinal Wilfrid Napier of South Africa have featured in papal speculation for years.
-
India's Astronaut Dream Takes Flight: Axiom Space Appoints Indian-Origin CEO
Tejpaul Bhatia, whose parents immigrated from India to New York in 1970, is a former Google executive.
-
When Pakistan Tried To Alter Line Of Control - The Siachen, Kargil Story
Pakistan has tried to unilaterally alter the Line of Control at least twice after signing the Simla Agreement.
-
Opinion | China's Real Problem Is At Home
Governments are unwilling to give China's overcapacity a free pass anymore. Higher tariffs against it will stay even if this round of the US-China trade war is settled.
-
NDTV Explains: Story Of Indus Waters Treaty, Partition, Planning, Pak Impact
In 1947, when the Partition occurred, India and Pakistan began disputing rights to the Indus River and its tributaries, prompting 13 years of squabbling and negotiation.
-
Opinion | Pahalgam Attack, Pakistan, And The Cost Of 'Ideology'
Twenty-six tourists gunned down in Pahalgam; one Ahmadi man lynched in Karachi. Two different types of tragedies, hundreds of miles apart, but stitched together by the same playbook of hate.
-
Pahalgam Attack Explained By Defence Expert Who Served In Kashmir 20 Years Ago
The Pahalgam attack shocked the nation and the world, drawing condemnation from Russia and China, as well as the US, Israel, and many European nations.
-
Exclusive - 6 Airbases, 1 Big Move: China's Play Against India
The Indian Air Force (IAF), which has reviewed images in this report, told NDTV, ''We have our mechanisms in place, and we keep ourselves aware.''
-
News Updates
-
Featured
-
More Links
-
Follow Us On