| Song | Singer(s) | Notes | |------|-----------|-------| | "Bikram Singha" (Title Track) | Shaan, Udit Narayan | High-energy intro song | | "Mon Je Kuriye" | Shreya Ghoshal, Shaan | Romantic duet | | "Ektu Ektu Kore" | Shreya Ghoshal, Jeet Gannguli | Soft romantic number | | "Baul E Mon" | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | Melodic, folk-inspired | | "Aaj Ki Raat" (Item Song) | Shreya Ghoshal | Special appearance by actress Subhashree Ganguly |
For Bengali cinema, Bikram Singha is significant because it bridged the gap between the old-school "Bangla commercial cinema" and the modern demand for slick production values. It successfully adapted a Telugu hit for the Bengali audience without losing the local flavor. For Prosenjit fans, it was a celebration of the "Prince" returning to the form that made him a household name. Bikram Singha Bengali Movie
The core strength of the lies in its classic "identical stranger" trope. Prosenjit Chatterjee plays a dual role—a feat he has mastered over his career. | Song | Singer(s) | Notes | |------|-----------|-------|
When the Bengali film industry (Tollywood) decided to reboot the mass-action genre in the mid-2010s, one name roared louder than the rest: . Officially titled Bikram Singha: The Lion Is Back , this 2015 action masala film remains a benchmark for commercial cinema in West Bengal. Directed by the prolific Rajiv Kumar Biswas, the movie was designed as a perfect festive treat, blending larger-than-life heroism, folk-lore inspired swagger, and high-octane stunts. The core strength of the lies in its
| Song | Singer(s) | Notes | |------|-----------|-------| | "Bikram Singha" (Title Track) | Shaan, Udit Narayan | High-energy intro song | | "Mon Je Kuriye" | Shreya Ghoshal, Shaan | Romantic duet | | "Ektu Ektu Kore" | Shreya Ghoshal, Jeet Gannguli | Soft romantic number | | "Baul E Mon" | Sonu Nigam, Shreya Ghoshal | Melodic, folk-inspired | | "Aaj Ki Raat" (Item Song) | Shreya Ghoshal | Special appearance by actress Subhashree Ganguly |
For Bengali cinema, Bikram Singha is significant because it bridged the gap between the old-school "Bangla commercial cinema" and the modern demand for slick production values. It successfully adapted a Telugu hit for the Bengali audience without losing the local flavor. For Prosenjit fans, it was a celebration of the "Prince" returning to the form that made him a household name.
The core strength of the lies in its classic "identical stranger" trope. Prosenjit Chatterjee plays a dual role—a feat he has mastered over his career.
When the Bengali film industry (Tollywood) decided to reboot the mass-action genre in the mid-2010s, one name roared louder than the rest: . Officially titled Bikram Singha: The Lion Is Back , this 2015 action masala film remains a benchmark for commercial cinema in West Bengal. Directed by the prolific Rajiv Kumar Biswas, the movie was designed as a perfect festive treat, blending larger-than-life heroism, folk-lore inspired swagger, and high-octane stunts.