After sending most of his time in the lab Dr Vaseegaran is out with his newest invention: Chiiti, it is an android that is made on his own self. However, his inventions fall in love with his actual fiance.
22 April 1951, Kochi, Kerala, India
25 February 1948, Gangtok, Sikkim
12 December 1950, Bangalore, Mysore State, India
1 January 1971, Chalakudy, Kerala, India
1 November 1973, Mangalore, Karnataka, India
October 28, 2011
Far too creative and imaginative to be passed over by discriminatory viewers turned off by the massive musical numbers.October 08, 2010
A melodramatic kitschy Indian musical about a robot built for national defense but who discovers his human side.April 20, 2015
Leave aside jokes running on the Internet. This film, just a few feet too long, is fine entertainment by itself.April 20, 2015
Shankar has been working on getting this film made for the past decade, and he clearly is so thrilled to get Robot into theaters that his enthusiasm is infectious. Filmgoers with a taste for the absurd will be richly rewarded.April 20, 2015
Not quite happy with the message that the movie was trying to drive, the script entrusts Rajnikanth with a courtroom appearance, where he delivers a sermon on how science can be used and misused.February 25, 2011
Good, bad, and weird in equal amounts, it's the best apocalyptic sci-fi-romcom-melodrama-dance-off date movie of the year.March 22, 2011
Imagine the worst bits of Alex Proyas' I, Robot (2004) and Robert Greenwald's Xanadu (1980), cobbled together with a dash of Shaw's Pygmalion, and you get some grim picture as to what S. Shankar's grating extravaganza Robot has to offer.October 10, 2010
Endhiran -- The Robot provides maximum bang for its reported $34 million budget with a sensationally overstated and overwhelming mash-up of American-style, f/x-driven sci-fi spectacle and exuberant Bollywood-style songs, dance and romance.April 20, 2015
Imagine the worst bits of Alex Proyas' I, Robot and Robert Greenwald's Xanadu, cobbled together with a dash of Shaw's Pygmalion, and you get some grim picture as to what S. Shankar's grating extravaganza Robot has to offer.