Close Menu
  • Home
  • Education
  • Health
  • National News
  • Politics
  • Relationship & Wellness
  • World News
What's Hot

‘No show of midriff, thighs, leg’: Madras High Court wants female dancers to follow festival rules

June 25, 2026

French mother, five children rescued from Pakistan home after decade-long captivity, abuse by husband

June 25, 2026

Gautam Adani unveils plan for 10 GW nuclear energy capacity by 2035

June 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
Global News Bulletin
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Education
  • Health
  • National News
  • Politics
  • Relationship & Wellness
  • World News
Global News Bulletin
Home»National News»Sing Geetham movie review: At 94, Singeetam Srinivasa Rao delivers a musical fable
National News

Sing Geetham movie review: At 94, Singeetam Srinivasa Rao delivers a musical fable

editorialBy editorialJune 13, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
Sing Geetham movie review: At 94, Singeetam Srinivasa Rao delivers a musical fable
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

Some films take years to make. Sing Geetham took nearly a lifetime. The idea lived in Singeetham Srinivasa Rao’s head for close to four decades before a producer finally said yes. This explains why the film feels the way it does: deeply personal, unique, stubbornly unconventional, and made with the kind of sincerity that cannot be manufactured. The man who once made a film without dialogues asks you to imagine a world where everyone sings, quite literally.

Kuberapuram is a fictional village in Andhra Pradesh that feels like it exists slightly outside of real time. It sits on gold, and outside interests have noticed. A young man named Pratap (Ayaan) arrives expecting a business opportunity. What he finds instead is a community that is holding itself together with less and less left to hold. At the center of the village’s resistance is Gowri (Ahilya Bamroo), a young woman with an unshakeable attachment to the land and the life it sustains. A gold mining operation managed by Renu (Shalini Kondepudi) is slowly eating into both.

Then, one day, everyone in Kuberapuram loses the ability to speak. Whatever they try to say comes out as a musical note. The village, already on edge, does not know what to make of it. Neither, for the first few minutes, will you. What that strange event means, what caused it, and what the village does about it is the story.