Bad President: Param Gill’s Bold Satire Wins Worldwide Applause
Mumbai 11 th December 2025 ( TGN ): In a time when mainstream studios avoid bold political commentary, an independent filmmaker has delivered a satire so fearless and so culturally relevant that it has ignited conversations across continents. Writer-director Param Gill’s explosive political comedy Bad President – released quietly and without major backing – has transformed into a global word-of-mouth sensation.
The film follows the outrageous journey of a corrupt businessman who unexpectedly rises to the highest office in the land – a storyline so exaggerated, yet so eerily familiar, that audiences have found it both hilarious and unsettling. With razor-sharp humour and unfiltered critique, Bad President serves as a reminder of how leadership can shape, distort, and sometimes destabilize a nation’s moral compass.
What makes its rise even more remarkable is the film’s complicated history. When it first debuted during the final stretch of Donald Trump’s first term, political pushback severely restricted its visibility. The film received limited promotion, reached few viewers, and eventually disappeared from public memory.
Then, years later, everything changed.
Trump’s dramatic return to the presidency triggered a sudden, organic rediscovery of Gill’s film. Without fresh marketing or re-release campaigns, Bad President began trending again, reconnecting with audiences who were now ready – perhaps eager – to revisit its satire. What once suffered from “Trump fatigue” is now being viewed as prophetic.
Gill attributes this shift to the film’s tone and truthfulness. Though styled like a Saturday Night Live–inspired satire, the screenplay is rooted entirely in real statements and public behaviour. “This was never about political sides,” Gill has said. “It was about the danger of putting a damaging role model before the world. Leaders across continents were copying that attitude.”
The filmmaker’s personal journey is as unconventional as his cinematic voice. He is famous among his patients for singing Bollywood-style melodies while performing root canals and dental implants – Gill always held filmmaking as his true calling. That unlikely path, supporters say, gave him the courage and faith to tell stories without fear.
With Bad President 2 already in development, Gill’s rise signals a broader shift. Audiences across the world are embracing challenging, truthful, risk-taking content.
And Bad President – a satire that Hollywood might never have dared to make – now stands as one of the most defining political comedies of this decade.

