Singh Saab the Great

Singh Saab the Great
Directed by Anil Sharma
Produced by Anuj Sharma
Sangeeta Ahir
Written by Shaktimaan Talwar
Starring Sunny Deol
Urvashi Rautela
Prakash Raj
Amrita Rao
Music by Anand Raj Anand
Sonu Nigam
Cinematography S. Gopinath
Edited by Ashfaque Makrani
Distributed by Eros International
Release date
  • 22 November 2013 (2013-11-22)
Running time
150 minutes
Country India
Language Hindi[1]

Singh Saab the Great, sometimes called SSTG, is a 2013 Indian action drama film directed by Anil Sharma. The film stars Sunny Deol, Urvashi Rautela and Prakash Raj as main characters. The film marks the return of Sunny Deol to action genre after a long time. Also, Deol and Sharma paired up once again after Gadar: Ek Prem Katha. The film narrates the story of a man who decides to teach a lesson to the man, who ruined his life, by reforming him. The film's story and screenplay has been written by Shaktimaan Talwar, and the action sequences have been directed by Tinu Verna and Kanal Kannan. The music has been provided by Anand Raj Anand and Sonu Nigam. Amisha Patel was supposed to play the lead role but backed out due to ever changing schedules. The film released officially on 22 November 2013.[2]

Plot

A common man works as a tax collector in a small city. A TV journalist uncovers the mysterious hero's back story. It starts in a small village named Chironji, with a small argument about food issues in a village caused by a local goon named Jatta Singh (Shabaz Khan). There, Singh Saab (Sunny Deol) makes his grand entry. Singh Saab is an honest, noble and loyal man. Above all else, he lives life on his honest principles and that makes him as a messiah for common people and he came with the offer from his movement named People’s Beat, which is for a noble cause, approached to Jatta Singh to let the goods from his factories to be used for a good cause. This enrages Jatta Singh and attacks on Singh Saab. He denies to hit back to honour the day, which was 2 October, Non- Violence Day. But things got messy, and Singh Saab and Jatta have a Duo. Then they get several invitations, which of one from Bhadhori, upsets him, and a TV reporter named Shikha Chuturvadi (Amrita Rao) approached to him and believes that he is living a noble life as a hoax. Then he was shaken and decided to tell her about the story of his life revolving around the name Bhadhori. It flashes back to 7 years earlier, the time when he was known as Saranjeet Singh Talwar, a well known collector and he was travelling to Bhadhori with his wife Minnie (Urvashi Rautela) for his transfer. There he starts a court of justice for action to be taken against corrupt individuals. There he meets a gangster alais a crime lord named Raja Dadta Bhudhev Singh (Prakash Raj). He has an excise of £32,029,000 to pay and he threatens Saranjeet to open his factories otherwise he will do something to his sister and ruin her marriage. This enrages Saranjeet and he then slaps Bhudhev which led to a threat to ruin Saranjeet’s life and will make him squeal. Things get messy when Bhudhev kidnaps Saranjeet’s sister’s father-in-law and makes him to obey his order to mix poison in the ritual of feeding sweets to the daughter-in-law and son, or the whole family will be poisoned. He tries but attempts to fail and Saranjeet finds that things are fishy. He is called by Bhudhev and finds out that Minnie was poisoned, by the cause of her drink being spiked with poison. They rush her to the hospital and Bhudhev has made a deal to exchange the order of his factories’ release for Dr. Anand, the neurosurgeon to perform the surgery for Minnie’s survival. Saranjeet agrees for Minnie’s unstable condition. But, it gets to late and Minnie passes away. Saranjeet is heartbroken and had found an old letter written by his wife during her last minutes. Furious Saranjeet goes to Bhudev and attacks him. He is then sentenced for 16 years of imprisonment. But, one day he met his old friend, Mohammad Iqbal (Rajit Kapur) who was the jailor official, and recommended to bring change not hatred. Now in present day, he is a dedicated man towards bringing a noble change to the society.

Cast

Music

The soundtrack album was composed by the music director Anand Raj Anand and Sonu Nigam composed the title track of the movie while the lyrics were penned by Kumaar. The music was launched on 29 Oct 2013. The album contains six songs.

Track #TitleComposerLyricsSinger(s)
1"Singh Saab The Great"Sonu NigamKumaarSonu Nigam, Teesha Nigam
2"Daaru Band Kal Se"Anand Raj AnandKumaarSonu Nigam
3"Palang Todh"Anand Raj AnandKumaarSunidhi Chauhan, Anand Raj Anand
4"Jab Mehndi Lag Lag Jaave"Anand Raj AnandKumaarSonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal
5"Daaru Band Kal Se (Remix)"Anand Raj AnandKumaarSonu Nigam
6"Heer"Anand Raj AnandKumaarSonu Nigam

Reception

Singh Saab The Great received mostly positive reviews from critics. David Chute of Variety praised Deol's action sequences.[3]

NDTV rated the movie as 3.5/5 stars, saying "There is a virility and fluency to the storytelling. Singh Saab The Great is a homage to the cinema of the 1980s when Sunny was macho."[4] Filmfare gave the film 4/5 stars, saying "SSTG is a mass entertainer. It's a Sunny Deol vehicle. Sunny Paaji is obviously on top of this game. His comedy punches, stirring Punjabi dialogues are all over top but perfectly suitable in context of film".[5]

The Times of India gave movie 3/5 stars, stating "Like all films that talk of reforming society, Anil Sharma's Singh Saab the Great has its heart in the correct place. Sunny Deol's earnestness shines, throughout the duration of this melodrama".[6] Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama gave a 3.5/5 star rating and wrote "Singh Saab the Great is a typical Sunny Deol film that a section of the audience still enjoys. The clapworthy dialogue, the raw appeal, the undercurrent of emotions and of course, the dhaai kilo ka haath should appeal to those who relish desi fares, especially the single screen audience".[7]

Box office

The film's total box office collections totaled approximately 36 Crore in India on a 30 Crore budget. Making the film an above average grosser at the box office.[8][9][10]

See also

References

  1. "SINGH SAAB THE GREAT Main language- Hindi". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  2. http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/moviemicro/cast/id/549451
  3. Chute, David (24 November 2013). "Film Review: 'Singh Saab the Great'". Variety. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  4. Subhash K Jha (2013-11-22). "Singh Saab The Great movie review". NDTV. Indo-Asian News Service. Archived from the original on 2013-11-22.
  5. http://www.filmfare.com/reviews/movie-review-singh-saab-the-great-4747.html
  6. "Singh Saab The Great movie review: Wallpaper, Story, Trailer at Times of India". Timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 2014-01-02.
  7. "Singh Saab The Great (2013) | Hindi Movie Critic Review By Taran Adarsh". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 2014-01-02.
  8. http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/moviemicro/boxoffice/id/549451
  9. http://archive.indianexpress.com/news/with-singh-sahab-the-great-sunny-deol-is-back-with-a-bang/1200624/
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