Jaat is an action film written and directed by Gopichand Malineni, in his Hindi debut, and produced by Mythri Movie Makers and People Media Factory. The film score and soundtrack is composed by Thaman S. It was theatrically released on 10 April 2025.
Star Cast:
Sunny Deol as Brigadier Baldev Pratap Singh
Randeep Hooda as Ranatunga / Muthuvel Karikalan
Regina Cassandra as Bharathi
Viineet Kumar Singh as Somulu
Saiyami Kher as SI Vijaya Lakshmi
Ramya Krishnan as President Vasundhara
Jagapathi Babu as CBI Officer Sathya Murthy
Babloo Prithiveeraj as CI C. H. Sunil Kumar
Zarina Wahab as Amma
Swaroopa Ghosh as Ranatunga’s mother
Ajay Ghosh as Ram Subba Reddy
Mushtaq Khan as Inspector
Makarand Deshpande as a villager
Ayesha Khan
Upendra Limaye as a Prison inmate
Murali Sharma as Brigadier Sukhveer Singh
Urvashi Rautela in special appearance in the song “Touch Kiya”
MOVIE REVIEW: If you’re walking into Jaat expecting nuance, logic, or depth—turn around. But if you’re here for sheer massy entertainment, over-the-top action, punchy dialogues, and Sunny Deol in full “dhai-kilo-ka-haath” mode, then fasten your seatbelts—this ride is for you. This is a one-time watch, especially for fans of Sunny Deol and those who revel in old-school mass masala cinema. Thaman S’s background score is one of the film’s biggest strengths—pumping energy into every major scene. The soundtrack, however, is forgettable and doesn’t linger beyond the film.
Directed by Gopichand Malineni, who makes his Hindi debut after delivering several blockbusters in Telugu cinema, Jaat stays true to the formula that’s earned him a loyal following down South: action, attitude, and adrenaline. His focused entirely on mass appeal. The story kicks off with great momentum. The first half is crackling with energy especially the “Sorry bol” sequence, which is pure whistle material. The screenplay takes a nosedive in the second half. The climax is nothing short of a one-man army showdown—hundreds of bad guys, slow-motion stunts, and the hero walking out of explosions unscathed.
Sunny Deol is in his element here. With a commanding screen presence and that unmistakable thunder in his voice, he delivers a high-voltage performance that carries the film, especially when the screenplay falters. Randeep Hooda brings gravitas to the villainous role and stands tall opposite Sunny Deol. Viineet Kumar Singh slipping effortlessly into his role, he adds value without stealing focus. Regina Cassandra got a meaty role, and she did justice to that. Saiyami Kher and Jagapathi Babu are underutilised.
Jaat Movie Rating:
Direction 3.5/5
Acting 3/5
Action 3.5/5
Story 2.5/5
Screenplay 2.5/5
Overall Hit ya Flop Rating: 3 out of 5 Stars (Good)