In the end, Santhu doesn't kill Rudra. He handcuffs him using his own welding tools and drags him—literally straight forward—to the police station, with the stolen land documents taped to his chest.

No bends. No breaks. Only truth. Tone: Masala action-romance with a heart of simplicity. Think Action Jackson meets Munnabhai MBBS , but with welding sparks instead of philosophy.

But Santhu doesn't beg or scheme. He simply starts doing "straight forward" good deeds around her—fixing her scooter, chasing off a rowdy moneylender threatening her colleague, and telling her father the truth about a bad investment. Slowly, Anjali realizes that his honesty isn't rudeness; it's a rare kind of courage. She falls for him.

Santhu Straight Forward

The climax unfolds on the day of a massive land registration scam. Rudra has cornered Santhu in an abandoned warehouse, five goons armed with iron rods. Santhu picks up a welding rod, sparks it, and says: "In welding, if you bend the metal even a little, it breaks. But if you keep it straight… it holds forever."

One day, he spots ( Radhika Pandit ), a cheerful bank employee who is everything he isn’t—diplomatic, playful, and skilled at navigating social minefields. Santhu falls hard. In his signature style, he walks straight up to her and declares, "I like you. No drama. Say yes or no." Amused and taken aback by his audacity, she says "No."

She kisses him on the cheek and whispers: "Yes, you idiot."

A brutal, no-choreography, raw fight ensues—not a dance, but a straight-forward brawl. Santhu doesn't dodge; he advances. One punch per lie. One kick per betrayal. He defeats them not with martial arts flair, but with relentless, honest force.