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Veera Simha Reddy (Telugu with English Subtitles)

02h 00m
Bengaluru movie tickets English Subtitles Gopichand Malineni films Mythri Movie Makers Nandamuri Balakrishna movies S. Thaman music Shruti Haasan movies Telugu action dramas Telugu faction movies Veera Simha Reddy U/A
  • Director: Gopichand Malineni
  • Writers: Gopichand Malineni
  • Stars:
  • Nandamuri Balakrishna
  • Shruthi Haasan
  • Duniya Vijay
  • Honey Rose
  • Varalaxmi Sarathkumar

Veera Simha Reddy at Victory Cinema Veera Simha Reddy brings Nandamuri Balakrishna to the big screen in a powerful dual role spanning two generations, two contrasting lives and one unresolved family conflict. The story begins far from the faction-dominated villages of Andhra Pradesh, with Jai Simha Reddy living as a successful businessman in Turkey under the care of his mother, Meenakshi. Jai has grown up without knowing his father personally. His life is defined by business, affection for his mother and his growing relationship with Eesha. As marriage discussions move forward, however, Jai learns that an important part of his identity has been concealed from him. His father, Veera Simha Reddy, is alive and remains a respected, influential leader carrying the weight of a violent past. Their long-awaited reunion becomes the gateway to a much larger story involving family loyalty, village politics, betrayal and enemies who have waited years to settle unfinished scores. Victory Cinema presents Veera Simha Reddy in Telugu with English subtitles for audiences from across Bengaluru and beyond. Written and directed by Gopichand Malineni, the film stars Nandamuri Balakrishna alongside Shruti Haasan, Honey Rose, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar, Duniya Vijay, Lal, Naveen Chandra, P. Ravi Shankar, Murali Sharma and Chandrika Ravi. Produced by Naveen Yerneni and Y. Ravi Shankar under Mythri Movie Makers, the film combines emotional family drama, faction rivalry, romance, celebration and large-scale action in a major Sankranti theatrical entertainer. Nandamuri Balakrishna in two generations Balakrishna plays both Veera Simha Reddy and Jai Simha Reddy, giving the film two heroes connected by blood but shaped by completely different environments. Jai is modern, educated and commercially successful. He lives outside India, speaks with confidence and approaches problems with the freedom of a man who has not grown up under factional pressure. His romantic interactions with Eesha give him humour, warmth and youthful energy. Veera Simha Reddy carries a different presence. He is rooted in the land, traditions and political history of his region. Villagers respect him as a protector who refuses to tolerate injustice, while his enemies see him as the central obstacle standing between them and complete control. The contrast allows Balakrishna to present the easygoing son and the commanding father through distinct appearances, body language and dialogue. Jai’s world contains business, romance and family discovery. Veera’s world contains responsibility, sacrifice and conflicts where every decision can affect an entire community. The title character is introduced as more than a faction leader. Veera believes that influence must be used to protect people rather than intimidate them. His authority has been earned through his willingness to stand in front when danger approaches. Jai discovers his father’s history Jai’s emotional journey begins when Meenakshi reveals the truth surrounding Veera Simha Reddy. The father he has never met is not merely a distant family member. He is a man whose name carries respect, anger and years of unresolved history. Honey Rose plays Meenakshi, a mother who has protected Jai while carrying difficult memories of her own. Her silence has allowed her son to grow away from violence, but the approaching marriage makes it impossible to keep the past hidden forever. When Veera travels to meet Jai and help settle the marriage, father and son finally stand together. For Jai, the encounter brings admiration, curiosity and questions about why their family remained separated. For Veera, it offers the possibility of reconnecting with the son who grew up beyond his reach. The reunion also creates danger. Veera’s enemies have not forgotten their conflict, and travelling outside his familiar territory does not remove the threat. The past follows him, forcing Jai to confront a history he did not know belonged to him. Shruti Haasan as Eesha Shruti Haasan plays Eesha, Jai’s romantic interest and an important presence in the lighter portions of the story. Their relationship brings humour, colour and musical energy into a film otherwise shaped by family secrets and violent rivalry. Eesha is introduced within Jai’s contemporary life, before he fully understands the legacy of the Simha Reddy name. Her interactions with him show the relaxed, affectionate personality that distinguishes Jai from his father. Songs including “Suguna Sundari” and “Mass Mogudu” give Balakrishna and Shruti Haasan opportunities for energetic dance and festive screen chemistry. Their romance also helps establish what Jai risks losing when the hidden conflict enters his life. As marriage brings two families together, Eesha becomes connected to circumstances far larger than an ordinary love story. Jai must balance the future he has planned with the responsibility created by his newly discovered past. Meenakshi and the cost of separation Honey Rose’s Meenakshi forms the emotional bridge between Veera and Jai. She understands both the strength of the father and the life she attempted to create for the son. Her history with Veera contains affection, separation and sacrifice. By raising Jai away from the faction environment, Meenakshi has tried to give him a life free from inherited hostility. Yet protecting him from the truth cannot permanently protect him from the people connected to that truth. The mother-son relationship gives the film warmth, while her connection to Veera adds emotional depth to the family conflict. Meenakshi is not simply revealing information. She is reopening a chapter that has shaped every major decision in her adult life. Bhanumathi and a divided family Varalaxmi Sarathkumar plays Bhanumathi, a formidable woman whose relationship with Veera Simha Reddy is central to the family history. Strong-willed, emotional and deeply affected by earlier events, Bhanumathi brings another dimension to the conflict. Her character demonstrates that faction stories are not driven only by men carrying weapons. Family wounds, competing loyalties and misunderstandings can influence the course of violence across generations. Varalaxmi Sarathkumar’s forceful screen presence makes Bhanumathi capable of standing opposite Balakrishna without being reduced to a background role. Her confrontations, emotional decisions and relationship with Veera contribute to the mystery Jai must understand. The film asks how affection within a family can become hostility and whether years of anger can be separated from the truth that originally created it. Duniya Vijay as Pratap Reddy Kannada actor Duniya Vijay plays Musali Madugu Pratap Reddy, a powerful adversary operating through fear, armed supporters and long-standing factional hostility. Pratap Reddy represents the violent political world Veera has spent years confronting. He does not accept Veera’s popularity or moral authority and sees the Simha Reddy name as a direct challenge to his influence. The casting brings Balakrishna and Duniya Vijay together in intense confrontations created for a mass theatrical audience. Their rivalry involves more than physical power. Each man represents a different idea of leadership: one seeks loyalty through protection, while the other attempts to control people through intimidation. Pratap’s actions also connect the earlier generation with Jai’s present. Even though Jai grows up outside India, he cannot remain permanently untouched by an enemy determined to pursue his father. Gopichand Malineni’s faction-action world Writer-director Gopichand Malineni presents Veera Simha Reddy as a large Telugu action drama inspired by the traditions of Rayalaseema faction cinema while expanding the story through an overseas setting and father-son structure. The film moves between Turkey and rural Andhra Pradesh, creating a visual contrast between Jai’s modern life and Veera’s politically charged homeland. One world offers romance, business and apparent security. The other is filled with village gatherings, family loyalties, weapons and threats that can erupt without warning. Rishi Punjabi’s cinematography captures the wide landscapes, processions, celebrations and large action set pieces. The older Veera is frequently framed with crowds and rural imagery that emphasise his position within the community. Navin Nooli’s editing connects the two generations while allowing the story to move between romance, family revelations and action. Sai Madhav Burra’s dialogues strengthen Veera’s public speeches and confrontations, giving Balakrishna forceful lines designed to produce an enthusiastic response inside the auditorium. The approximately 170-minute presentation gives the narrative room to establish Jai’s life, reveal Veera’s history, explore the divided family and build towards major confrontations involving the central rivals. S. Thaman’s music and mass score S. Thaman composes the songs and background score, adding festival energy, emotional weight and elevation to the film. “Jai Balayya” celebrates Veera Simha Reddy as a leader connected deeply with his people. Its procession-like presentation, rhythmic chanting and rural imagery support the character’s larger-than-life presence. “Suguna Sundari” brings romance and dance to Jai and Eesha’s relationship, while “Maa Bava Manobhavalu” adds colourful performance energy. “Mass Mogudu” presents Balakrishna and Shruti Haasan in another lively commercial number. The background score is especially important during Veera’s entrances, public confrontations and action scenes. Percussion, orchestration and recurring heroic themes give additional scale to the title character. Inside a cinema auditorium, Thaman’s score, Sai Madhav Burra’s dialogue and Balakrishna’s screen presence combine to create the celebratory atmosphere expected from a major Sankranti release. Telugu with English subtitles Victory Cinema presents Veera Simha Reddy in its original Telugu language with English subtitles. Audiences can experience Balakrishna’s dialogue delivery, Shruti Haasan’s performance, Honey Rose’s emotional scenes, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar’s confrontations and Duniya Vijay’s menacing presence while clearly following every important exchange. The subtitles help viewers understand family revelations, faction history, political discussions and rapid dialogue during confrontations. They make the film accessible to Bengaluru’s diverse moviegoing audience while preserving the power and rhythm of the original Telugu performances. The film carries a U/A classification and includes strong action violence, weapons, bloodshed and threatening faction situations. Parents may wish to consider its intensity and extended runtime when booking for younger viewers. A major Sankranti release for Bengaluru Veera Simha Reddy arrived in cinemas on January 12, 2023 as a major Telugu Sankranti attraction. Balakrishna’s dual role, Gopichand Malineni’s action-focused direction, Duniya Vijay’s Telugu debut, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar’s intense role and S. Thaman’s soundtrack created substantial release-day anticipation. Victory Cinema welcomes movie lovers from every part of Bengaluru to experience the film with the sound, scale and shared energy of the big screen. Ranked #1 on Google for movie theatres in Bengaluru, Victory Cinema is a destination for major Telugu releases, festival entertainers and action films created for passionate theatrical audiences. Booking directly through victorycinema.in allows moviegoers to check Veera Simha Reddy showtimes, select preferred seats and complete their ticket booking without booking fees. Witness the roar of Veera Simha Reddy Veera Simha Reddy begins with Jai living far from the conflict that shaped his parents, but the discovery of his father brings him face to face with a legacy of leadership, sacrifice and faction rivalry. Balakrishna’s dual performance, Shruti Haasan’s romance, Honey Rose’s emotional role, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar’s intensity, Duniya Vijay’s opposition and S. Thaman’s music come together in a large-scale Telugu action drama. Watch Veera Simha Reddy in Telugu with English subtitles at Victory Cinema, Bengaluru. Check showtimes, select your seats and book directly on victorycinema.in without booking fees. Enter the world of the Simha Reddy family and witness a son confront the enemies, secrets and responsibilities waiting inside his father’s powerful legacy.