“Swag Movie” is a film that combines the Drama and Comedy genres. Directed and written by Hasith Goli, the movie is brought to life by People Media Factory and produced by T. G. Vishwa Prasad. It premiered digitally on March 17, 2025, under the title Swag 2025 Movie, with a runtime of 2 hours and 39 minutes.
Swag 2025 Movie Overview

Movie Name | Swag Movie |
Original Language | Telugu |
Spoken Language | Hindi |
Release Date | 17 March 2025 |
Runtime | 2 hour and 39 minutes |
Country | India |
Genres | Comedy Drama |
Director | Hasith Goli |
Producer | T. G. Vishwa Prasad |
Swag 2025 Movie Screenshot



Swag 2025 Movie Star Cast
Actor Name | Role |
---|---|
Sree Vishnu | Bhavabhuti / Vibhuthi / Singa |
Ritu Varma | Anubhuti |
Meera Jasmine | Kausalya |
Sunil | – |
Rajendra Prasad | King Bhavabhuti (Past) |
Vennela Kishore | Comic Relief Character |
Priyadarshi | Singa’s Friend |
Brahmaji | Police Officer |
Sampath Raj | Antagonist / Rival King |
Swag 2025 Movie Trailer
Swag 2025 Movie Review
The narrative kicks off in 1551, under the matriarchal reign of Queen Rukmini Devi (Ritu Varma), where men are oppressed and a king, Bhavabhuti (Sree Vishnu), schemes to flip the power structure to patriarchy, setting off a generational curse tied to the Swaganika dynasty. Fast forward to 2024, and a retiring chauvinistic cop, also named Bhavabhuti (Sree Vishnu), learns of an ancestral fortune.
He arrives at the “Vamsa Vruksha Nilayam” (Family Tree Mansion) to claim it, only to clash with other heirs: Anubhuti (Ritu Varma), a misandrist construction worker; Singareni “Singa” (Sree Vishnu), a clueless influencer; and Vibhuthi (Sree Vishnu), a transgender dancer revealed as Bhavabhuti’s twin. Through flashbacks, we meet Yayathi (Sree Vishnu), a 1970s patriarch obsessed with a male heir, whose choices ripple into the present. The film juggles these threads to explore gender roles, greed, and redemption, but the ride is bumpier than intended.
Sree Vishnu is the film’s beating heart, delivering a tour-de-force performance across five roles—king, cop, influencer, patriarch, and dancer. His versatility shines brightest as Vibhuthi, where his Kathakali dance sequences and emotional depth steal the show, marking a career highlight. Ritu Varma brings grit to Anubhuti, though her character’s inconsistent feminism feels underdeveloped.
Meera Jasmine, in a comeback role as Bhavabhuti’s estranged wife Revathi, delivers a poignant performance that anchors the film’s emotional climax. The supporting cast—Sunil as a bumbling cop, Daksha Nagarkar, and Goparaju Ramana—adds flavor, but many characters lack the depth needed to fully connect.