very very boring movie...avoid it all cost....lost my 200 rs...
All wrong facts are shown in soorma movie there was no common wealth at London in 2008 in climax we r being fooled and director lives in fools paradise.Jhund maar di Sandeep Singh ki biography ki
Daljeet Ko acting nahi aati to seek le pehle aise kisi ki biopic ki aisi karne ka kya faayeda
Comparing to other biopics like ms Dhoni,milkha Singh and sanju Soorma is not up to the mark to attach with audience.Screenplay is is somewhere goes boring.Songs included in film are not so much connected or get connecting to people.But Sandeep Singh's struggle after the bullet shot in his back is incredible ..really Diljit played that part so much with determination and heart.His family struggle and support for him is also well shown.Although the film is average to watch and can be made much better.An epic story line but a tardy direction and production. If efforts were made like bhaag milka bhaag, it would have been consummate movie experience for all sports enthusiasts. The movie is repleting full house just because of the story line.Could have been better but doesn't look realistic like other sports movie. Acting is average and after a point it gets boring.Bollywood’s love affair with sports films isn’t something new. But of late we have had a spate of mainstream sagas with sportstars taking centrestage. These stories, about underdogs, their triumphs and struggles, are essentially entertaining and rousing stories. But, sadly, not all tales are interestingly narrated. Many of these stories that could be rousing and touching are ultimately undone by their bare-bones story arc and the desperation to show the main character as a flawless God-like being. Worse, some Hindi films make it worse by adding gratuitous romance and sentimentality that end up feeling more like a middling after-school special than an insightful look at sports and the dynamics within. In this week’s solo Hindi film release, Soorma, executive producer and director Shaad Ali could have had a winner on his hands despite not having much grist, since he knows precisely what to highlight. It’s the miraculous recovery and comeback of ace hockey player Sandeep Singh, nicknamed “Flicker Singh” for his drag flicks in penalty corners, that were instrumental in deciding the fate of many of the matches he played that make a riveting account. But giving in to too many unnecessary demands of commercial cinema, Ali lets the story float on the surface of familiar turf, rather than digging deeper to reveal what propels him.Singh’s life has too many people waiting for him to reach the pinnacle of success, and when he suffers, there are others who are as much a part of his misery and grief. Everybody’s dreams get shattered, yet his parents, his loyal brother and uncle rally around him with unconditional support. For director Ali the story of such a gritty man should have been stirring enough. But he uses the tagline that says: ‘’The Greatest Comeback Story of the Hockey Legend Sandeep Singh”, and that may be a bit far-fetched, since by no stretch of imagination, Singh was, or, is a “legend”. To be fair, Singh did fight against all odds, and got back on his feet to make a comeback in international hockey in 2008. Subsequently, India won the 2009 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup under his captaincy and went on to qualify for the 2012 Olympics, but is Singh that great a player? That could well be a debate reagitating another round of controversies that our national game is perennially plagued with. The film drifts into a romantic tale and digresses from Singh’s struggles. What goes in the film’s favour though is Diljit Dosanjh’s performance.
Lost the message at the stake of sensationalism. Could be far better. A penalty stroke missedWaste of time worst acting no proper storyline more drama than real story...
0 stars out of 5.ekdum bekaar hai...sanju tou bhi this hai..