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The movie A Film by Aravind (2005) made him famous. [8] In 2006, the Tamil movie Naalai was released. [9] The same year came another film, Yuga (2006). Richard had a lesser role to play, and the film received mixed reviews. [10] Bhagyalakshmi Bumper Draw, a Telugu film was released in 2007.
Thoongaa Vanam (transl. Sleepless forest) is a 2015 Indian action thriller film directed by Rajesh M. Selva.The film stars an ensemble cast including Kamal Haasan, Prakash Raj, Trisha Krishnan, Kishore, Sampath Raj, Guru Somasundaram, Yugi Sethu, Aman Abdullah, Asha Sharath, Madhu Shalini and Jagan.
This is a list of multilingual Indian films.The majority of films listed have been shot simultaneously alongside each other as a part of the same project—rather than being remade or dubbed at a later date.
King is a 2008 Indian Telugu-language action comedy film directed by Sreenu Vaitla. The film stars Nagarjuna Akkineni in the titular role, Trisha , Mamta Mohandas and Srihari . Devi Sri Prasad composed the film's music.
King was the first production venture of S. K. Krishnakant, who had earlier worked as the production executive for Lakshmi Movie Makers. The film was written and directed by A. X. Solomon who had directed the Arjun-Sonali Bendre starrer Kannodu Kanbathellam in 1999, under the name Prabhu. However, as that film did not perform to expectations at ...
Draupathi is a 2020 Indian Tamil-language action drama film written, directed, and produced by Mohan G. Kshatriyan. [1] The film stars Richard Rishi and Sheela Rajkumar, with K. S. G. Venkatesh, Karunas, Nishanth and Soundariya Nanjundan in supporting roles. [2]
Ko 2 (transl. King 2) is a 2016 Indian political thriller film co-written and directed by Sarath, who earlier worked as associate director/screenplay writer for films like Unnaipol Oruvan and Billa II. The film is produced by Elred Kumar and stars Bobby Simha and Nikki Galrani, while Prakash Raj reprises his role from the first film.
Times of India wrote, "With a not-so-bad plot, the movie goes on to become a tiresome watch as the story progresses, thanks to unengaging and predictable sequences." [ 13 ] India Today wrote, "Director Thirugnanam’s story is so predictable that even a kid who watches the film would guess the so-called twists from a mile away.