Singhi Aditya

Singhi Aditya’s filmography is already starting to look wild, honestly. Shaitaan (2024) set the tone, dragging viewers straight into a gritty, twisted world where nothing’s really as it seems. The guy’s got a knack for peeling back the glossy surface of characters and showing the weird, messy stuff underneath. Shaitaan isn’t just about cheap scares; it digs into the kind of evil that creeps up on you, the kind that wears a nice face but leaves you feeling uneasy hours later. Then there’s Sikandar (2025), which flips the script with a whole different vibe. This one’s less supernatural, more raw drama, but the tension? Still off the charts. Sikandar throws you right into the chaos of ambition gone sideways — people chasing power, losing themselves, double-crossing their own shadows. You’re never quite sure who to root for, which is honestly refreshing. Characters keep making choices you don’t expect, and suddenly you realize you’re kinda rooting for the “bad guy.” And let’s not ignore Deva (2025). With that one, Aditya dives deeper into family and loyalty, but with way more bite than your average melodrama. It’s got grit, swagger, and a bunch of punchy dialogue that actually feels like something real people would say. There’s always this undercurrent of danger, like everything could blow up at any second. If the early buzz is anything to go by, Deva’s gonna leave people talking — and maybe a little shook.

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Personal details

  • Professions: Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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