Sipaayi | |
Director: | Rajath Mayee |
Producer: | Siddharth Mahesh |
Starring: |
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Music: | B. Ajaneesh Loknath |
Cinematography: | Paramesh C M |
Editing: | Akshay P Rao |
Studio: | Orange Pixels |
Runtime: | 125 minutes |
Country: | India |
Language: | Kannada |
Sipaayi is a 2016 Indian Kannada-language masala film written and directed by Rajath Mayee in his directorial debut.[1] The film stars debutant Siddharth Mahesh (who also produced the film),[2] Sruthi Hariharan, Sanchari Vijay,[3] Achyuth Kumar, Gaurish Akki, Krishna Hebbale and Bharath Singh.
Siddharth is a news reporter, whose aim is to fight against illegal trading activities in Bangalore, but his plans are thwarted by a crime boss Virat, where he along with his friends Divya and Manju sets out to expose and bring Virat to justice.
Rajath Mayee and Siddharth Mahesh met on the sets of Lucia as they both were coproducers of the film.[4] Sruthi Hariharan, who starred in Lucia, was cast in this film.[5] [6] Production started on 19 May 2014. Completed shoot with the song shoot on 4 July 2015.
Sipaayi (Original Soundtrack) | |
Type: | Soundtrack |
Artist: | B. Ajaneesh Loknath |
Released: | 20 May 2016 |
Genre: | Film soundtrack |
Length: | 22:20 |
Language: | Kannada |
Label: | D Beats |
Prev Title: | Kirik Party |
Prev Year: | 2016 |
Next Title: | Sundaranga Jaana |
Next Year: | 2016 |
B. Ajaneesh Loknath composed the soundtrack of Sipaayi. The lyrics were written by Jayant Kaikini, Hrudaya Shiva, Chethan Kumar and Bharath Venkataswamy. B. Ajaneesh Loknath, Nanditha, Chinmayi, Shashank Sheshagiri, Bobby CR and Udith Haritas lent their voices for the songs. Audio released on 20 May 2016.
Sunayana Suresh of The Times of India gave 2.5 out of 5 stars and wrote "The filmmaker has tried his hand at narrating the subject in a non-linear manner. This is interesting, no doubt but the fact that he relies on the usual tropes of commercial cinema is what makes it tedius. While the maker has tried to be different with the screenplay, the commercial must haves like fights and songs slow down the narrative that should have kept one on the edge of the seat."[7] The Hindu wrote "The film is narrated so poorly that it is only in the second half that we even learn about what the lead character does in the film."[8]