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Ritika Singh Movies List [patched] May 2026

The fame was loud, but Ritika went quiet. She chose Shuddhi , a Kannada film where she played a girl trapped in a mental asylum. No boxing gloves here. Just a straitjacket and a haunting silence. The film wasn't a hit, but for Ritika, it was her first real "actor's" move. She proved she could stand still and shake an audience more than a fight sequence ever could.

By now, Hollywood was calling for stunt doubles, but Ritika wanted soul. In Oh My Dog , she starred alongside a child and a dog. No villains. No blood. Just pure, exhausting love. She played a mother fighting to keep her son’s pet alive. It was for Amazon Prime, it was "small," but for Ritika, it was the hardest role yet. "Boxing is easy," she joked. "Crying over a lost puppy is real acting."

Ritika wasn’t supposed to be a movie star. She was a boxer. But when director Sudha Kongara looked into her eyes, she didn’t see a stuntwoman; she saw a soul. ritika singh movies list

In Mathagam (Disney+ Hotstar), she played a fierce police officer navigating a gang war. She brought back the grit of her debut but with the wisdom of a veteran.

Then came 90 ML (Telugu). A shift. A comedy-drama about friendship and heartbreak. People wondered: Can the boxer do rom-com? She played , the girl who drinks beer and speaks her mind. She didn't just do it; she smashed the stereotype. Ritika proved she could laugh as hard as she could fight. The fame was loud, but Ritika went quiet

The world went digital. Ritika conquered it.

In Irudhi Suttru (Tamil) and its Hindi counterpart Saala Khadoos , Ritika played , a raw, impoverished fisherwoman with a thunderous right hook. Standing opposite R. Madhavan, she didn’t act—she bled . Critics called it a miracle. For Ritika, it was just Tuesday at the gym. She won the Filmfare Award for Best Female Debut, not because she learned to cry, but because she refused to quit. Just a straitjacket and a haunting silence

Mani Ratnam called. In Chekka Chivantha Vaanam , she played a cop named . She wasn't the lead, but she held the frame like a loaded gun—sharp, dangerous, and lean.