A character in Gaayapadda Simham (Wounded Lion) quips that police officers are holding a “success meet,” much like film teams that celebrate barely a day after a theatrical release. The officer shoots back, asking why such celebrations should be limited to reel heroes when real-life ones have more reason to revel. In moments like these, when the writing pokes fun at the Telugu film industry, debut director Kasyap Sreenivas’s film, starring Tharun Bhascker and Faria Abdullah, finds its comic edge.
The premise is deliberately outrageous. Darahas (Tharun), content with his middle-class life, is told he must move to the US if he hopes to marry his girlfriend (Maanasa Choudhary). When shifting immigration laws derail his plans and he is deported, his response is extreme — he seeks revenge on Donald Trump.

Building on a story by Surya Prakash Jyosula, Kashyap packs the narrative with sharp observations on the enduring aspiration among Telugu families to send their children to the US. He layers this with spoofs of mainstream cinema and its archetypes, alongside a crime subplot that loosely echoes Ram Gopal Varma’s Satya. The film’s self-awareness surfaces in a line that describes it as an unlikely blend of romantic comedy and crime drama.
‘GaayaPadda Simham’ (Telugu)
Director: Kasyap Sreenivas
Cast: Tharun Bhascker, Faria Abdullah, JD Chakravarthy, Maanasa Choudhary
Runtime: 160 minutes
Storyline: When an engineer who aspires to make a living in the US is deported, he seeks revenge on the President.
The film sets its tone early, making it clear that nothing is to be taken too seriously — from the tongue-in-cheek title card (“don’t laugh, it’s a serious matter”) to the stylised introduction of police officers in a cop-universe mode, with nods to Singham and Simmba.
The opening stretches move briskly, establishing characters and their family and social dynamics with ease. This is evident in moments like Darahas’s overnight shift in attitude, well before he even sets foot in the US, and a family member’s wide-eyed awe at Cyberabad’s glass-and-steel skyline, sharply contrasted with Hyderabad’s older, more modest neighbourhoods.
The humour is democratic. It gently pokes fun at everyone: a grandmother whose fervent, camphor-laced prayers seem to have darkened the deities’ portraits on the walls, and a Gen Z influencer who filters life through the lens of digital traction, dismissing anything “normal” as inherently boring.
The film spares no one, including its leads. A sly nod to Pelli Choopulu — Tharun Bhascker’s directorial debut — hints at how the filmmaker was briefly boxed into the “new-age director” label after its breakout success. Faria Abdullah’s character, named Chitti, cheekily references her turn in Jathi Ratnalu. Meanwhile, JD Chakravarthy plays a crime lord who is, amusingly, still single well into his forties — you get the drift.
Some of the film’s most enjoyable moments come from its cinephile in-jokes. A character modelled after Arjun Reddy is questioned about his inability to move on from heartbreak. Elsewhere, there are playful nods to screenplay mechanics — star cameos, non-linear storytelling, and the exaggerated bass in dialogue delivery.
The central revenge arc against Donald Trump gathers momentum when Sree Vishnu appears in an extended cameo that carries an element of surprise. A brief phone conversation between his character and his mother (played by Jhansi Laxmi) is among the film’s most crowd-pleasing moments.
However, the build-up to this twist could have been tighter. The narrative lingers too long on Darahas’s post-deportation struggles without adding enough depth. Kasyap Sreenivas and Vishnu Oi, playing his friends, often mirror the audience’s own impatience.

The intersection of Darahas’s revenge plot and the crime lord’s operations is knowingly silly and intermittently effective, but the film soon loses steam, redeemed only by sporadic flashes of humour. A key shortcoming is its inability to convincingly establish Darahas’s emotional stakes. Despite ample screen time, his disappointment never quite lands; even within a farcical setup, there isn’t enough to keep the audience invested. The very premise of revenge against a US President quickly begins to feel gimmicky.
Real-life reports of deportations among students and young professionals from the Telugu states may have sparked the idea, but the film never convincingly conveys a sense of no way forward. Darahas’s family remains supportive, and viable alternatives — like finding work in Hyderabad — are left unexplored.
Even the track involving Chakravarthy’s crime lord grows repetitive, though the segments featuring Sree Vishnu and his family inject some much-needed energy. Performances by Sree Vishnu, Tharun Bhascker and Faria Abdullah, along with Kasyap Sreenivas, help sustain interest when the screenplay falters. Vishnu Oi, despite his sharp comic timing, is underutilised.
Ultimately, Gaayapadda Simham is a film that seems more promising on paper than in execution. Its moments of hilarity are punctuated by long, underwhelming stretches. A sequel is on the horizon, but it will need sharper writing to fully deliver.
Published – May 01, 2026 03:11 pm IST






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