Singam Puli
Singam Puli is a 2011 Indian Tamil-language action drama film written and directed by Sai Ramani. It stars Jiiva in dual roles as the hero and villain, co-starring Ramya, Honey Rose and Santhanam. With its release delayed multiple times, the film saw a theatrical release on 4 March 2011. The film was dubbed in Telugu as Simham Puli. It opened to a mixed critical reception, and was moderately successful at the box office.
Plot
The film has a deceptively casual beginning: a middle-class family consisting of parents, a daughter and identical twin sons: Shiva and Ashok Kumar. Shiva works in a fish market, and Ashok is a lawyer. Shiva is a typical hero who attacks baddies with his bare fists; a rugged man who will brook no injustice. Devout Ashok's goodness is a facade that hides his evil womanizing nature. Both have romantic interests. Shweta is Shiva's long-time sweetheart, while Ashok's life is one long, lustful journey as he charms every woman he meets into his bed. However, Shiva can do nothing right as far as his parents are concerned; they trust Ashok and always misunderstand Shiva's righteous anger, and Shiva's every attempt to show up his Machiavellian twin fails. Ashok, on the other hand, is pally with the local goons and uses his brains to assist them in their nefarious activities. Matters come to a head when Ashok lures a girl called Gayatri with false pretenses, pretending to be falling in love with her at first, ending up in having sex with her, and eventually killing her by pushing off the terrace when he learns that she becomes pregnant.Shiva lodges a complaint on Ashok, but this fails as he could not prove that whether it was him or Ashok who did the crime due to their faces. Shiva learns that a security guard saw Ashok pushing Gayatri from the roof. He tells the guard to meet him in the evening, but the guard is killed by Ashok as the guard saw him in the evening and thought he was Shiva. Shiva learns this, and a cat-and-mouse game begins between the siblings. This angers Ashok, who he tries to kill Shiva and employs a gang to do so. Eventually, Shiva learns of this plot and confronts Ashok. During the fight, Ashok is killed by his own man. Shiva walks with his father, who for the first time accepts him.
Cast
Soundtrack
All songs scored by Mani Sharma. The song "Figaru" is based on "Hare Rama" from Okkadu. The song "Kangalal" is based on "Endhuko" from Chirutha. The song "Varrale" is based on "Parare" from Stalin.Behindwoods.com gave the album 2 stars out of 5, noting it had "all the ingredients for a mass entertainer", and felt it "has the ability to make people dance to his tunes."