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Dilwali89 thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago

Simmba movie review: With whistle-worthy action sequences and explosive dialogues, Ranveer Singh-Rohit Shetty's year-end treat will make you wish they had collaborated sooner

The film is complete bang for your buck

  • ByAnkita Chaurasia
  • Published: December 28, 2018 1:45 AM IST
47SHARES

We have come to associate directors with their signature style of filmmaking. Karan Johar is known for his larger-than-life themes, Sanjay Leela Bhansali delivers opulent dramas, Imtiaz Ali has the pulse on modern romances and Aanand L Rai is the master of telling the most ordinary stories, extraordinarily. Similarly Rohit Shetty is known for entertainers, with a lot of action and comedy thrown in the mix. What's interesting this time around is that he has company in Ranveer Singh, who personifies entertainment himself. The film sounds promising right from the word go. So it is with great excitement that I go for a press screening of the film and here's what I thought of it...

What's it about
Sangram Bhalerao (Ranveer Singh) is unscrupulous, which he attributes to his upbringing as an orphan. He learns quite early on in life that an uniform will fetch you respect and help you earn money. So despite being involved in petty thefts, he studies to become a police officer. When he gets the uniform, he does what he had always dreamt of - earn big bucks. He doesn't care about the crimes taking place as long as he is being bribed. He hits jackpot when he is transferred to the Miramar police station, as he terms it to be a gold mine. Once there he pays a visit to Durva Ranade (Sonu Sood) and assures him of his cooperation. His own troops are also are aware of his bribe-taking ways as his reputation precedes him. And while everyone joins him in the money-making business, Nityanand Mohile (Ashutosh Rana) warns him of the consequences of his ways, after trying to make him see the error of his overlooking crimes. But Simmba being Simmba, continues to make merry and make 'families' everywhere he goes. He falls in love at first sight with Shagun (Sara Ali Khan) and dreams up of not one, but two remixed songs with her. When he spots Aakruti (Vaidehi Parshurami) teaching street kids, he immediately takes a liking to her as she reminds him of his teacher and later when she comes to the police station to lodge a complaint, he proclaims her as a sister. Everything is hunky dory as Simmba continues to draw government's salary and work for the goons. But everything changes when one fateful night Aakruti is raped and murdered. Then on begins the rise of Sangram Bhalerao.
What's hot
Ranveer Singh. And when we say that, we don't mean only the way he looks. Ranveer has an innate quality of becoming the character he plays and with Sangram Bhalerao, it looks like he didn't have to do much. Ranveer's swashbuckling swag lends so beautifully to a cop's character, it seems almost criminal to have kept him away from the uniform for so long. He is made-to-order for these roles! But don't get me wrong here, I'm in no manner saying that it was easy for him to play the character. Far from it. The role did require him to show the full arc of Sangram - as he transforms from a streetsmart cop to a helpless one and then emerges as the one who delivers justice. Ranveer certainly deserves every clap and whistle that he fetches throughout the film. As does Rohit Shetty. Every scene of the film made me wonder as to what took them so long to get together. Rohit is in his element here, with some amazingly choreographed fight sequences that will make the single-screen audience hoot. However, you see how far he has come as a filmmaker too when he avoids his usual tropes and steers clear of blowing up cars or planning elaborate car chase sequences. He also will win the masses with the manner in which he addresses an issue with a super-entertaining plot. He speaks the language of the masses and that should help the film connect. Not to say that it's the only thing that the audience will appreciate. The narrative is laced with humour and some explosive dialogue play. Everytime Sangram goes, 'Tell me something I don't know,' or 'mind is blowing,' the crowd erupts. Sara Ali Khan has little to do in the film, except dance and look pretty, which she does. But, she should surely heave a sigh of relief that this wasn't her debut film. Ajay Devgn's cameo in the film lends even more authenticity to Simmba. The whistles just don't stop when he appears on screen. Also, the amazing background score deserves a round of applause.
What's not
We have all, at some point or the other, been part of conversations where people have advocated the need for public justice over the judicial system. No matter what side you took in that conversation, Simmba will force you to agree with the fact that taking matters in one's own hands is the only solution left. Like we pointed out, it is the general consensus. However, the thought of cops determining the fate of a criminal is not the most comforting one, no?
The film falls in the generic genre of family entertainers - fare that we have grown up on. Which is why, at times, the film confuses you. While you find yourself doubling up in laughter through the first half, the somber second half has some very emotional moments. However, this is not a flaw. What I have a complain with is the rather one-dimensional ensemble cast. While Ranveer has a well-fleshed out character, the others seem pretty flimsy in comparison.
What to do
Anyone who has watched The Lion King, would first think of the cute little lion cub from the film when thinking of Simmba. Not anymore. Ranveer Singh is here to steal the name and also the roar. Simmba provides complete bang for your buck. But it will also make you rue all the years Rohit Shetty and Ranveer Singh have wasted without collaborating. And it will make you wish they come together again and soon. Simmba will ensure you end the year on a high. Watch it with your family and ideally in a single-screen theatre for the complete experience.
Rating:4 out of 54 Star Rating
AllThatCritique thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: AhmadZahir

I hope Sara is not the one getting raped in the movie. From trailer, it seems like she had a really minimal role.


What if she was the one getting raped in the movie. How does that matter. Weird.
Dilwali89 thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
Taran Adarsh

Simmba Movie Review

Review by Taran Adarsh
28 December 2018 2:15 am IST
4.0

Telugu film TEMPER is one of my favourites. A film that's very fresh in my memory. A well-packaged entertainer, it was embellished with a bravura, commanding performance by the lead man Jr NTR. The expectations from SIMMBA - an official adaptation of TEMPER - are monumental.

Movie Review Simmba

Rohit Shetty has to live up to the expectations for varied reasons: He teams up with Ranveer Singh for the first time... He attempts a cop story yet again... And, of course, those who have watched TEMPER will compare the two films minutely.

Rohit borrows the essence from TEMPER, but modifies a major chunk of that film [especially the second half and climax]. What eventually unfolds on screen is so different, in a positive way.

First, the plot line, without giving away the entire story / spoilers. Sangram Bhalerao aka Simmba [Ranveer Singh] is a dishonest police officer. Once transferred to a different town, he meets Shagun [Sara Ali Khan] and love blossoms between the two.

Sangram also develops a bond with Aakruti [Vaidehi Parashurami], a medical student who teaches poor kids. She realises her students are being used for drug peddling by the brothers [Saurabh Gokhale and Amrit Singh] of a powerful man, Durva [Sonu Sood].

Aakruti lands up at the pub where the illegal activities are taking place and manages to capture it all on her cellphone, but gets caught. What happens next?

First things first. Rohit Shetty and screenplay writer Yunus Sajawal [additional screenplay by Sajid Samji] pick and choose some memorable, clap-trap moments from TEMPER and give SIMMBA an altogether different texture. The essence of the story remains intact, but it's made more contemporary to suit the pan India tastes.

There's no denying that Rohit Shetty is the present-day Manmohan Desai of Hindi cinema. His fundas are crystal clear: Deliver entertainment in large doses. In SIMMBA, there's a powerful message too that stays with you once the movie has concluded.

SIMMBA is an absolute joyride in the first half. A number of sequences and the witty and sharp one-liners [dialogues by Farhad Samji] are sure to bring the house down. The post-interval portions get serious and you may miss the fun and laughter, but the issue that's depicted demands seriousness.

Like I stated at the very outset, Rohit and his writers offer a completely new conclusion to the tale and those who've watched TEMPER will notice the difference. In my opinion, the courtroom sequence and the final moments take the graph of the film higher.

Ranveer Singh is the lifeline, the soul of the film and I must add, he proves he's an all rounder who can essay diverse characters with superb ease. SIMMBA is sure to multiply his fan following by leaps and bounds.

Sara Ali Khan sparkles, just like her debut film KEDARNATH, although there's not much scope for her in the second half. Sonu Sood is in terrific form. SIMMBA would've faltered if the antagonist wouldn't be as convincing as the protagonist. Sonu matches up to Ranveer every time they come face to face.

SIMMBA has a huge supporting cast, but I would like to single out a few names that add weight to the proceedings. Ashutosh Rana is exceptional. The salute sequence will be greeted with a thunderous applause. Siddharth Jadhav excels. Vaidehi Parashurami is wonderful. Ashwini Kalsekar is fantastic. Her dialogues in the climax will be greeted with applause. Ganesh Yadav and Ashok Samarth [the lawyers] do a fine job. Saurabh Gokhale is first-rate. Sarita Joshi is alright.

SIMMBA has a number of cameos, including the GOLMAAL gang [Arshad Warsi, Tusshar Kapoor, Shreyas Talpade and Kunal Kemmu]. Ajay Devgn's introduction will be greeted with whistles and claps and his act is sure to find love. Last but not the least, there's Akshay Kumar too. Again, the viewers are in for a treat.

The soundtrack gels well with the mood of the film. Aankh Maare' is already a chartbuster, while Aala Re Aala' leaves you awestruck by its execution. Background score deserves special mention, especially the fusion of the themes of SINGHAM and SIMMBA. Jomon T John's cinematography is flawless. The action sequences are vibrant and striking.

On the whole, SIMMBA is a sure-shot winner, no two opinions about it. This one will storm the boxoffice. 2018 is sure to conclude with a roar!

Eggon_Snow thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago

Simmba Hindi Movie Review

Simmba Review

You enter the theatre with trepidation. Rohit Shetty brand of films can be deafening and blinding. Each time Bajirao Singham (Ajay Devgn) punches or slaps the bad guys there is a distinct possibility that the sound guy will crank up the volume of the slap beyond tolerable. And the acid colors of vehicles colliding or exploding mid air or both will surely make you run for cover. Simmba did not need any colliding vehicles. Ranveer Singh was enough.


Ranveer Singh has perhaps the best comic timing of them all today. He delivers all his corny punchlines really well. Stars with a, 'Pamper me or you will hamper me...' And before you look at your neighbor and say, 'Whaaa?' he's on to, 'Dard hai ghutne mein, takleef hai uthne mein.'


His Marathi sounds more authentic than Bajirao Singham's delivery. But Singham had nicer songs. Simmba wins simply because Ranveer Singh has so much energy, but then we all know that. As Simmba would say, 'Tell me something I don't know.'


So Simmba as a little lad watches power at play when he sees a corrupt cop counting cash after beating up the leader of pickpockets, and decides he will study hard and become a policeman. I gagged at the 'Police' tattoo on Simmba's arm. But it got a whole lot of whistles, that's for sure. Grown up Simmba is very clear. He wants to make lots of money, and allows baddies like Durga Ranade (played wonderfully by Sonu Sood) to call him a dog who instead of Pedigree, gets fed with cash. Simmba has been posted to the Miramar Police Station in Goa and as long as he keeps his mouth shut and helps the baddie Durga Ranade to continue doing his thing all is okay.


This gives Simmba time to romance the local pretty lass (Sara Ali Khan, whose role does not require her to do much) who runs a catering business across from the police station. If the movie starts out with five stars as a rating, then the pointlessness of the romantic thread (especially the teenagerish jealous streak Simmba shows when her best friend shows up) will lose the film one star. It's funny only because Ranveer Singh makes the funny bits really funny. Anyone else would have been slapped several times. And yes, the 'feeling shy' bit was unexpected and adorable.


The turning point comes too late in the life of corrupt and cocky Simmba. By now you want to slap that girl who bravely ventures into the drug den armed only with a phone. The inevitable happens to Akruti and you actually feel like jumping into the screen and waking up the drunken sleeping gorgeousness that is Simmba so he can save the girl. The drunken scene with Ashutosh Rana - who plays the upright cop Mohile - is fabulous. This brings us to the prolonged hospital scene that makes you want to weep with frustration and cut off another half star. So now this three and a half star film begins to limp to the conclusion. Thank goodness Ranveer Singh can play angry cop really well. I love the breaking furniture scene with bodies of baddies and put my fingers into me mouth to whistle at the uniform hanging in Ranveer's office. Yay! The avenging hero emerges!


Gone are the silly (but funny) dialog, and now it is turn for the throw cash at the screen dialog. But not before you have torn your hair out at the very long pity party scene where everyone wants to kill the rapists but profess their helplessness. You understand why it is long, but you wish everyone would just nod to 'kill the rapists' together instead of saying it individually. It's painful to chop another half star but the superb dialog Simmba throws at the snarling Sonu Sood restrained by a swarm of cops earns it back. Ranveer's revenge story is complete, but not over for Sonu Sood.


In a horrible Korean TV show style torture scene, we now wait for the predictable but oh-so-enjoyable 'boss fight'. Ajay Devgn's Singham shows up to rescue Simmba, and the two beat up all the baddies. The Rohit Shetty Khaki Avengers Universe gets another character and the theatre erupts in whoops and whistles.


So what happens to the last half star? It gets knocked off because the inane songs are used as transition from one situation to another. It gets knocked off because bribing the little mute lad's dad is a cheap plot trick to get rid of a witness. It also gets knocked off because they had to show Akruti's ghost smiling at the camera once the revenge is done.


But the film truly belongs to Ranveer Singh and Ranveer Singh only. He's brilliant and funny, and super buff. Plus he has great legs. Book your tickets now, and don't forget to take your sunglasses!

A street smart orphan realises that the corrupt cops have money and power, so he grows up to become one. Ranveer Singh crackles in the title role of Simmba and wins us over in this simple tale of bad cop turning into gold. Eminently watchable!
Simmba Rating - 3.00 out of 5 (Good)
3 stars - Manisha Lakhe
Edited by Eggon_Snow - 6 years ago
Maroonporsche thumbnail
Posted: 6 years ago
Taran Adarsh

Simmba Movie Review

Review by Taran Adarsh
28 December 2018 2:15 am IST
4.0

Telugu film TEMPER is one of my favourites. A film that's very fresh in my memory. A well-packaged entertainer, it was embellished with a bravura, commanding performance by the lead man Jr NTR. The expectations from SIMMBA - an official adaptation of TEMPER - are monumental.

Movie Review Simmba

Rohit Shetty has to live up to the expectations for varied reasons: He teams up with Ranveer Singh for the first time... He attempts a cop story yet again... And, of course, those who have watched TEMPER will compare the two films minutely.

Rohit borrows the essence from TEMPER, but modifies a major chunk of that film [especially the second half and climax]. What eventually unfolds on screen is so different, in a positive way.

First, the plot line, without giving away the entire story / spoilers. Sangram Bhalerao aka Simmba [Ranveer Singh] is a dishonest police officer. Once transferred to a different town, he meets Shagun [Sara Ali Khan] and love blossoms between the two.

Sangram also develops a bond with Aakruti [Vaidehi Parashurami], a medical student who teaches poor kids. She realises her students are being used for drug peddling by the brothers [Saurabh Gokhale and Amrit Singh] of a powerful man, Durva [Sonu Sood].

Aakruti lands up at the pub where the illegal activities are taking place and manages to capture it all on her cellphone, but gets caught. What happens next?

First things first. Rohit Shetty and screenplay writer Yunus Sajawal [additional screenplay by Sajid Samji] pick and choose some memorable, clap-trap moments from TEMPER and give SIMMBA an altogether different texture. The essence of the story remains intact, but it's made more contemporary to suit the pan India tastes.

There's no denying that Rohit Shetty is the present-day Manmohan Desai of Hindi cinema. His fundas are crystal clear: Deliver entertainment in large doses. In SIMMBA, there's a powerful message too that stays with you once the movie has concluded.

SIMMBA is an absolute joyride in the first half. A number of sequences and the witty and sharp one-liners [dialogues by Farhad Samji] are sure to bring the house down. The post-interval portions get serious and you may miss the fun and laughter, but the issue that's depicted demands seriousness.

Like I stated at the very outset, Rohit and his writers offer a completely new conclusion to the tale and those who've watched TEMPER will notice the difference. In my opinion, the courtroom sequence and the final moments take the graph of the film higher.

Ranveer Singh is the lifeline, the soul of the film and I must add, he proves he's an all rounder who can essay diverse characters with superb ease. SIMMBA is sure to multiply his fan following by leaps and bounds.

Sara Ali Khan sparkles, just like her debut film KEDARNATH, although there's not much scope for her in the second half. Sonu Sood is in terrific form. SIMMBA would've faltered if the antagonist wouldn't be as convincing as the protagonist. Sonu matches up to Ranveer every time they come face to face.

SIMMBA has a huge supporting cast, but I would like to single out a few names that add weight to the proceedings. Ashutosh Rana is exceptional. The salute sequence will be greeted with a thunderous applause. Siddharth Jadhav excels. Vaidehi Parashurami is wonderful. Ashwini Kalsekar is fantastic. Her dialogues in the climax will be greeted with applause. Ganesh Yadav and Ashok Samarth [the lawyers] do a fine job. Saurabh Gokhale is first-rate. Sarita Joshi is alright.

SIMMBA has a number of cameos, including the GOLMAAL gang [Arshad Warsi, Tusshar Kapoor, Shreyas Talpade and Kunal Kemmu]. Ajay Devgn's introduction will be greeted with whistles and claps and his act is sure to find love. Last but not the least, there's Akshay Kumar too. Again, the viewers are in for a treat.

The soundtrack gels well with the mood of the film. Aankh Maare' is already a chartbuster, while Aala Re Aala' leaves you awestruck by its execution. Background score deserves special mention, especially the fusion of the themes of SINGHAM and SIMMBA. Jomon T John's cinematography is flawless. The action sequences are vibrant and striking.

On the whole, SIMMBA is a sure-shot winner, no two opinions about it. This one will storm the boxoffice. 2018 is sure to conclude with a roar!

Nishita123 thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
Good luck Team Simmba... Sara!! 👍🏼
Aaa Aaa Aaa Aaankh maare...😆
briahna thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
Movie mostly getting positive reviews
Well seems like it will work at boxoffice like all other shetty movies
Reviews don't really matter for his movies , they do well regardless

Here we talk about khans end oh well seems like ranveer finished shah and ranbir finished Bhai And Amir Khud finish Hogaya

And those who saying Gullu boy not commercial, who would have thought Andhadhun would be commercially znd critically success
Gullu will work big in multiplex if critically appreciated

Well next year going to be fight between ranveer , tiger , RK and Varun

And there will be Vicky snd others RR

New gens have arrived and how!
HZAnita thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
These positive reviews are making me nervous now. 😲 Fingers crossed that this will do well for Ranveer! I am tired of him being underappreciated because he is one of the most versatile actors in BW, IMO.

Good luck to the team!!
Maroonporsche thumbnail
Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: HZAnita

These positive reviews are making me nervous now. 😲 Fingers crossed that this will do well for Ranveer! I am tired of him being underappreciated because he is one of the most versatile actors in BW, IMO.

Good luck to the team!!


Once I see the film Ill flood it with my review. Good or bad ⭐️
SASSZS thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: HZAnita

These positive reviews are making me nervous now.😲 Fingers crossed that this will do well for Ranveer! I am tired of him being underappreciated because he is one of the most versatile actors in BW, IMO.

Good luck to the team!!



No one understands this emotion better than another Veer stan! Hugs my fellow Veer-ian! Hang in there! Fingers crossed for our boy! 🤗

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