It's almost transcendentally basic, and you can sort of see why it became a hit. Set out in bright, warm colours that mimic the film stocks of old - this Goa's grass is a shade of green only experienced on LSD trips - it does nothing to challenge or complicate its vision of "righteous cop cleans up the streets"; while in some respects a throwback to the mass cinema of yore, it actually plays as far less nuanced than certain Hindi crime movies of the Seventies, Eighties and Nineties. Shetty's route-one camerawork does all the heavy lifting, establishing an off-kilter world in a flurry of Dutch angles before approaching the hero at knee height and gazing adoringly upwards. With his matinee-idol 'tache, Devgn certainly looks dashing kicking ass in a vest and taking his belt to his foes' backsides - you can well imagine matinee mums and grannies swooning - but the mischief and fun promised in that first song go AWOL along the way; instead, key scenes are stolen by Jha, reprising his role from the original, and seemingly having a blast playing a character with no redeeming features whatsoever. Some solid car- and person-flipping stuntwork, but much of it borders on the braindead, and it makes the average Fast & Furious movie of this period seem like James Ellroy.
Singham is available to rent via Prime Video, along with its sequel Singham Returns; a third film in the series, Singham Again, opens in selected cinemas today, and will be reviewed here in due course.
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