
Singham Returns
- Director
- Rohit Shetty
- Studio
- Reliance EntertainmentAjay Devgn FFilmsRohit Shetty Picturez
- Release Date
- 14 August 2014
- Running Time
- 142 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹105.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹220.50 Cr
Review
Rohit Shetty's "Singham Returns" is a film that understands something fundamental about its audience—we don't just want to watch a cop catch criminals; we want to feel the weight of his conscience, the sting of his losses, and the quiet redemption that comes from doing what's right when the world conspires against you. Ajay Devgn carries this film with a performance that moves effortlessly between the explosive action hero we expect and a man genuinely wounded by betrayal and grief. When Singham stands helpless as Guruji is murdered, we see the crack in his armor, and it matters. The direction leans heavily into spectacle—as Shetty always does—but there's a emotional core here that elevates it beyond mere masala. The romance with Avni feels earned rather than forced, a moment of tenderness that grounds the larger narrative about institutional corruption and personal vengeance.
Yet the film doesn't escape its own contradictions. For every moment of genuine pathos, there's an action sequence that borders on the absurd, and while that's often Shetty's signature style, here it occasionally undercuts the serious stakes the story is trying to establish. The villain Babaji needed more texture—he remains more concept than character, a godman antagonist we understand thematically but never truly fear. The undercover subplot, while providing narrative momentum, feels somewhat predictable, and some supporting characters fade into the background when they deserved more dimension. What s
Storyline
So basically, this cop named Bajirao Singham gets posted to Mumbai as a DCP, and right away he stumbles upon one of his officers who's been killed inside an ambulance with loads of cash nearby. He starts digging into it and realizes there's this sketchy godman type character called Babaji who's got connections with corrupt politicians, including a big shot minister. Things get really personal when Babaji's people murder Singham's mentor, Guruji, and Singham can't do anything about it at that moment, which obviously messes with his head.
To keep things under wraps, Singham pretends to resign from the force and heads back to his hometown, which is where he reconnects with Avni, this girl he knew growing up. They start developing feelings for each other, which actually seems pretty genuine and sweet. But plot twist—Singham's actually there undercover the whole time, trying to gather dirt on Babaji and his entire operation.
While working his secret mission, Singham manages to nab one of Babaji's key guys, a dude named Altaf Khan who's basically the money distributor bribing voters left and right. But when Singham tries to transport him back to the city with protection, things go sideways and Altaf ends up seriously hurt. Meanwhile, the corrupt minister starts targeting and harming everyone connected to Guruji, including people close to Singham, which raises the stakes considerably.



