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Saiyami Kher returns to Special Ops after five years

Saiyami Kher returns to Special Ops after five years

Time of India01-07-2025
Saiyami Kher is making a comeback in 'Special Ops Season 2,' reuniting with Neeraj Pandey and Kay Kay Menon after five years. The spy thriller sees Saiyami reprising her role as a special agent, engaging in intense combat. She underwent rigorous training for the action-packed sequences.
Saiyami Kher
is all set to return in
Special Ops Season 2
, reuniting with director
Neeraj Pandey
and co-star
Kay Kay Menon
after a five-year gap.
Describing her return as an emotional experience, Saiyami shared, 'Coming back to the sets of
Special Ops
after five years was deeply nostalgic.
It brought back memories—from the intensity of the scenes to the camaraderie of the team. Working again with Neeraj sir and Kay Kay Menon is incredibly enriching.
Their depth and vision push you to give your best every time.'
Saiyami will reprise her role as a special agent in the action-packed series, which sees her engaging in high-octane combat and stunt sequences. For the physically demanding role, she underwent rigorous training in hand-to-hand combat and action choreography.
Last seen in
Agni
alongside Pratik Gandhi, Saiyami is making a strong return to the screen with a mix of action and emotional depth in
Special Ops 2
. The actress is also set to make her Malayalam debut soon in a film opposite Roshan Mathew, further expanding her versatile repertoire.
With fans eagerly awaiting the new season, Saiyami's return adds an exciting edge to the thrilling world of espionage and covert operations.
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A lot can happen in a week. On July 25, JP Thuminad's Su From So was released on 13 screens across Karnataka. By the end of seven days, the Kannada film was available on close to 150 screens and had mopped up nearly Rs 16 crore, producer Raj B Shetty said. 'That's remarkable – it's a star number associated with superhit films,' Shetty told Scroll . Not only is Su From So continuing to do roaring business in Karnataka, especially in the capital Bengaluru, it has also been dubbed into Malayalam and was released in Kerala on August 1. Anybody who hasn't watched Su From So will be startled by the success of a movie with mostly theatre actors and none of the usual blandishments of commercial cinema. Nobody who has watched Su From So will be surprised by the love it has received. Thuminad's debut feature, which he has also written, is a rambunctious comedy of manners set in a village in southern Karnataka. The beautifully written, performed and staged movie tucks into a consciously chaotic and absurdist narrative a firm message about the treatment of women. Ashoka (played by the director) pretends to be possessed by a female spirit in order to get out of an uncomfortable situation. Ravi Anna (Shaneel Gautham), the village's de facto head, is pressurised into heading the investigation. A dodgy television godman (Raj B Shetty) is called in as an exorcist. Even as Ashoka finds it hard to keep up his pretence, it appears that the ghost of Sulochana from Someshwara ('Su From So') is actually hovering around. Sulochana's daughter Bhanu (Sandhya Arakere) gets embroiled in the goings-on, adding to Ravi Anna's headache. The movie's chief pleasure lies in watching the villagers bumble about, hold forth and behave at cross-purposes while trying to solve the mystery behind Ashoka's behaviour. 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Shaneel Gautham was among the few actors who knew the entire script. Gautham is likely to known as Ravi Anna in the conceivable future for his terrific turn as the saga's reluctant knight in shining armour. 'I played the character with great joy,' Gautham told Scroll . 'I was the one person who had heard the complete story, I knew it from top to bottom. I thought it would be easy to play Ravi Anna. But JP fought a lot to make me get under Ravi Anna's skin.' Gautham had no references for the role. 'I imitated what JP told me to do,' he said. 'The villagers view Ravi Anna as someone who is daring or dashing. He is somebody people turn to. He needed to look huge and separate.' Thuminad deliberately surrounded Gautham, who is six feet tall, with actors who were shorter than him to make Ravi Anna appear imposing. The shoot was a source of 'great joy', Gautham said. 'I had been mesmerised by JP's writing right from the start,' he added. 'When we are making a film, we tend to lose judgement. But when we watch the film with audiences, we can recollect what we felt when we were making it.' Thuminad didn't just write and direct Su From So but also played a key character – triple duty that Shetty himself had performed on his own Ondu Motteya Kathe . 'I didn't want JP to feel the pressure I felt when I directed my first film,' Shetty said. 'He got all the support he needed.' This included recruiting experienced technicians such as cinematographer S Chandrasekaran and editor Nithin Shetty. The assistant directors were well-versed with the script, and knew exactly what to do when Thuminad was in front of the camera for Ashoka's scenes. Su From So 's miraculous run isn't just great news for its makers. The movie's popularity is a shot in the arm for Kannada cinema too, Shetty said. But he is leery of holding up Su From So as an exemplar of the recent wave of offbeat Kannada films. 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