⚠ Investor Advisory — Immediate Caution Required

Any person considering any financial arrangement involving Balaji Subbu, Vivek Ravichandran, Deepa Iyer or Hamsini Entertainment Ltd must be placed on the gravest possible alert. The accounts documented in this investigation describe a deliberate, systematic fraud: the overlapping sale of the same theatrical distribution stake to multiple victims, false reporting of film performance to deny returns, and the active intimidation of victims who dared to ask questions. Do not commit any capital. Do not trust any assurances. If you have already invested, preserve every record and contact a solicitor immediately.

What has unfolded around Hamsini Entertainment Ltd is not a corporate failure in the ordinary sense. It is, by every account documented in the course of this investigation, one of the most brazen financial frauds to have been perpetrated within the overseas Tamil cinema distribution circuit — and almost certainly the largest.

Hamsini Entertainment, founded and operated by Balaji Vishwanath Subbu, built a credible-looking profile by attaching itself to some of Tamil cinema's most commercially powerful releases. That profile was not incidental to the fraud. It was the instrument of it. The bigger the names attached to the pitch, the more convincing it appeared, and the more capital could be extracted from victims who had every reason to believe the opportunity was genuine.

The company has now entered formal administration in the United Kingdom. Vivek Ravichandran, founder of Huebox Studios, is identified by sources as a co-operator. A third figure, Deepa Iyer, is identified across no fewer than five independently verified accounts as the primary recruiter of victims — a participant whose role cannot be treated as peripheral or incidental to what took place.

Estimates from multiple sources now place the total funds extracted from victims at approaching $13 million. The true figure may be greater still.

Who is Hamsini Entertainment?

Hamsini Entertainment Ltd is a UK-registered company that operated as an overseas theatrical distributor of Tamil-language films, targeting Tamil diaspora audiences across the United Kingdom and other international markets. Founded by Balaji Vishwanath Subbu, the company was incorporated in England and Wales and positioned itself as a licensed intermediary between major Tamil film production houses in India and international cinema circuits.

The business presented itself as well-connected within the Tamil film industry, claiming established relationships with leading studios and the ability to secure theatrical rights to some of the most anticipated productions in Tamil cinema. It cultivated a public profile around these claimed associations, using the credibility of the films and studios it referenced to attract both investor capital and industry recognition.

Over several years of active operation, the company entered into distribution agreements covering territories including the United Kingdom and the United States, licensing theatrical rights for Tamil productions and raising investor funds purportedly to finance those acquisitions. It presented these arrangements to investors as straightforward, profitable co-investment opportunities — a characterisation that the accounts documented in this investigation contradict entirely.

Hamsini Entertainment Ltd entered formal administration in the United Kingdom in 2025. The administration followed the accumulation of investor complaints, disputed fund structures, and what sources describe as the systematic misrepresentation of investment opportunities over a sustained period. It is now the subject of ongoing fraud investigations and formal legal proceedings.

How the fraud model worked

The mechanism by which this fraud was executed is specific, deliberate and, once understood, unmistakeable in its design. This is not a case of poor commercial judgement. It is a structured scheme by which the same asset — the theatrical distribution rights to a Tamil film — was sold simultaneously and repeatedly to multiple victims, with the outcome predetermined regardless of how the film performed.

Hamsini would acquire the overseas theatrical distribution rights to a Tamil film for a fixed sum. It would then approach investors, representing those rights as an equity co-investment opportunity. A 50% share of theatrical rights acquired for, say, $100,000 would be offered to an investor for $50,000 — a straightforward co-investment at cost, on its face entirely reasonable.

The fraud lies in what came next. Rather than selling that single 50% stake once, Hamsini sold an equivalent stake to multiple investors simultaneously. The same 50% theatrical rights share, offered to ten people at $50,000 each, generated $500,000 against an outlay of $100,000. The difference — $400,000 — was extracted before a single ticket was sold. The fraud was structurally complete the moment the investors paid.

When films were released, investors were invariably told the project had made a loss — that the cost of acquiring the theatrical rights was high relative to what the film earned — and that there was nothing to return. In documented cases, films known to have performed strongly at the box office were still reported to investors as having yielded no returns. Victims had no independent mechanism to challenge these figures.

The fraud scheme: a step-by-step breakdown

Illustrated Case Analysis

How the Hamsini Theatrical Distribution Rights Fraud Operated

A plain-language walkthrough using a USA rights example. The figures used are illustrative only — actual deal sizes, investor numbers and amounts varied across transactions and may have been significantly larger. The structure of the scheme, however, is consistent across all documented cases.

1
The Legitimate Purchase
Hamsini pays $100,000 for USA theatrical distribution rights
This part is real. Balaji Subbu genuinely acquires the USA theatrical distribution rights for a major Tamil film for $100,000. The film, the studio, the star — all real. This legitimacy is precisely what makes the fraud believable to every investor approached.
2
The Recruiters
Deepa Iyer approaches investors with personal assurances of safety
⚠️

Deepa Iyer — verified across 5+ independent accounts as the primary recruiter — personally approaches investors with total confidence and explicit assurances of investment safety. She is alleged to have received a commission per introduction. Victims trusted her completely. That trust was the mechanism of the entire operation.

👩‍👧
FamilyLife savings
🏠
HomeownerSold home
💼
Business$510K+
📈
Investor$450K+
🏥
NHS Worker$450K
🏦
Capital firm$8M
3
The Identical Pitch
"Pay $50,000 — you get 50% of the USA theatrical returns"
Each investor hears: "We acquired the USA theatrical rights for $100,000. Pay $50,000 and own a 50% equity stake in the distribution returns." It sounds fair — a co-investment at cost with a real film and a real studio. What nobody is told: that same 50% stake is being offered to 10 different people simultaneously.
4
The Extraction
$400,000 pocketed before a single ticket is sold
10 investors × $50,000 = $500,000 collected. Cost of rights: $100,000. $400,000 extracted on day one. No film has screened. The fraud is done — regardless of what the film earns at the box office.
The numbers — plain and simple
Hamsini pays studio
$100K
Only genuine outlay. Used to establish credibility.
Each investor pays
$50K
Per victim. Same stake sold to 10 people.
Victims defrauded
×10
Each paid for a stake that can only legally exist once.
Total collected
$500K
Hamsini's total receipts from a single deal.
Immediate profit
$400K
Hamsini's gain — extracted before the film opens.
Coolie — real scale
~$8M
Same model applied to one Rajinikanth film.
5
The Cover Story
Film releases. Every investor is told it made a loss.
Regardless of actual box office performance, every investor receives the same message: "The film underperformed — the cost of acquiring the theatrical rights was high relative to what it earned. There is nothing to return." Investors have no way to independently audit the figures. They are told what they are told.
6
The Silencing
Ask where your money went — get threatened with police action
When investors press for answers or visit addresses connected to Balaji Subbu, they are met with silence — or in multiple documented cases — explicit threats of police action for harassment. The victim, having lost everything, is intimidated by the perpetrator into silence.
Real transaction → trusted recruiter → identical stake sold to many → profit extracted before release → losses reported regardless of performance → victims silenced. This is not failed business. This is a fraud operation with a defined, repeating method.

Companies House filings: the secured lending record

Public records at UK Companies House disclose that Hamsini Entertainment entered into a secured lending arrangement with Bluestar Global Capital Limited in August 2025, granting both fixed and floating charges over the company's assets. Bluestar and its founder Nayan Thakrar represent one of the largest single sums connected to Hamsini's operations. Thakrar is also associated with Eden Parfums, a London-based fragrance licensing business including products connected to Cristiano Ronaldo. His victimisation reflects the breadth of this fraud: the scheme ensnared sophisticated financial parties as readily as individuals of modest means.

The most substantial documented transaction centres on Rajinikanth's film Coolie, produced by Sun Pictures. Approximately $8 million is reported by multiple independent sources to have been raised from investors and attributed to this single theatrical distribution arrangement, with returns promised explicitly at the point each investor committed. Those returns have not been paid.

Reports circulating in investor circles suggest that Hamsini continued referencing major forthcoming productions — including a potential Sun Pictures involvement in a project widely believed to be Jailer 2 — as leverage to attract new capital even as its existing obligations remained catastrophically unmet. The question of why a studio of Sun Pictures' standing would maintain any association with a company surrounded by fraud allegations and formal insolvency proceedings remains unanswered.

The wider investor network

Bluestar Global Capital represents one node in a significantly larger constellation of defrauded victims. The pool encompasses organised business interests and private individuals in equal measure. Amirtha Raman of HolyCow! Ventures is among those understood to be seeking clarity on committed funds.

A third figure, Deepa Iyer, is identified across no fewer than five independently verified accounts as the primary recruiter of investor-victims. Her function within the network is established by consistent, independent testimony: she was a functional, financially incentivised component of the mechanism by which victims were identified, approached, reassured and committed to investments that were by their structure designed never to pay them back.

Deepa Iyer is also understood to have recently established her own distribution company, Devi Pictures. Of particular note is a post published on Hamsini Entertainment's own social media channels in which the company publicly thanked Deepa Iyer and Devi Pictures for their contribution and outlined plans for continued collaboration:

This public acknowledgement — made by Hamsini Entertainment itself — confirms the closeness of the working relationship between Balaji Subbu and Deepa Iyer, and directly contradicts any characterisation of her involvement as incidental or unknown to the principal operators of the scheme.

Testimony: what the victims say

"I was introduced by Deepa Iyer, who was categorical that the investment was properly structured and completely safe. Every assurance she gave has since proved entirely false. Nothing has been returned."

— Investor, identity protected

"Deepa Iyer made the introduction. Deepa Iyer provided the confidence. Without her involvement, I would never have been anywhere near this. She is as responsible for what happened to me as anyone else in this scheme."

— Investor, location withheld

"When I sought answers from Balaji Subbu, I was told I faced police action for harassment. I am the person who lost everything. He threatened me for asking where my own money had gone."

— Investor, name withheld at request

"I later came to understand that Deepa Iyer was receiving payment for each person she brought in. That was never disclosed. Had I known she had a direct financial interest in my investing, I would have conducted myself entirely differently."

— A further investor

Among the cases documented: one investor committed approximately $380,000 — described as their entire life savings — and has received nothing. A second individual sold their family home to raise approximately $510,000 for a specific theatrical distribution deal and was told the film had underperformed and the capital was irrecoverable. A third case involves $450,000 across three film deals, all reported as losses — despite sources confirming that at least one of those titles generated substantial revenue at the North American box office.

Attempts to reach Balaji Subbu

Affected parties have taken direct steps to locate and confront Balaji Subbu in person. Addresses understood to be connected to him have been visited. No contact has been made. This publication made direct approaches to Balaji Subbu, Vivek Ravichandran and Deepa Iyer with detailed questions arising from this investigation. No response was received from any party.

A deliberately limited public footprint

One of the most striking features of this case is the near-complete absence of any verifiable public identity for Balaji Subbu. A man who, by the documented accounts of his victims, moved millions of dollars of investor capital through transactions with India's most prominent film studios maintained, throughout, a profile so thin as to make verification of even his basic biographical details close to impossible. No consistent photographic record. No traceable professional history. No public statements. No social media presence of any substance. This is not the profile of a legitimate theatrical distribution executive. It is the profile of someone operating with the deliberate intention of being impossible to find, trace, or hold to account.

Prior business links revisited

Companies House records establish that Balaji Subbu was previously a director and shareholder of Spectromax Solutions Ltd — later renamed DEXRA Solutions Limited — alongside Dominic Prabhu. Prabhu subsequently became connected to a Scottish Government IT programme that was the subject of a BBC investigation examining contractor arrangements, conflicts of interest, and staffing structures with visa-related implications. The programme's cost rose from approximately $130 million to $226 million. Over the same period, Spectromax's recorded assets rose from approximately $103,000 in 2014 to approximately $4.5 million in 2015, with Balaji Subbu recorded as director and partner throughout. Prabhu is also known as the husband of Tamil actress Sindhu Menon.

Future films used as bait

In a pattern entirely consistent with every stage of this fraud, Hamsini continued referencing major upcoming Tamil productions as the basis for attracting new investor capital even as its existing obligations remained catastrophically unmet. The use of high-profile, unverified future theatrical projects as leverage to solicit fresh commitments — without disclosure of the existing complaints and outstanding losses — is a feature of this scheme that warrants specific and urgent attention. Anyone approached recently with any such proposition should treat it as a direct continuation of the fraud documented here.

Assessment

This is one of the gravest financial frauds to have been perpetrated within the overseas Tamil cinema ecosystem. It is serious not only in its scale — with credible estimates approaching $13 million — but in its duration, its deliberateness, the breadth of the victim pool it ensnared across every social and economic background, and the callousness with which victims who attempted to recover their funds were treated.

The names Balaji Subbu, Vivek Ravichandran, Deepa Iyer and Hamsini Entertainment Ltd are now linked, consistently and permanently, to accounts of systematic financial fraud, the exploitation of community trust, and the active intimidation of victims who sought accountability.

The full scale of what has taken place has almost certainly not yet been established. If you have had any dealings with any of these parties — of any nature — seek independent legal counsel immediately and preserve every record you hold.

Were you defrauded?

If you have suffered financial loss or been misled in connection with Balaji Subbu, Vivek Ravichandran, Deepa Iyer or Hamsini Entertainment Ltd, submit your account below. All information is treated in the strictest confidence. Every account may support ongoing legal and investigative proceedings.

Your identity will not be disclosed without your explicit consent. Information may support ongoing investigative and legal proceedings.

Verified investor accounts

The following accounts have been submitted to this investigation and independently verified through primary documentation — including screenshots of direct communications with Hamsini Entertainment and Deepa Iyer, bank transfer receipts, and signed investment agreements. Names are withheld at each individual's request.

Investor — private individual $13,000 lost VerifiedIndependently verified through screenshots of direct communications with Hamsini Entertainment, bank transfer receipts confirming payment, and written investment representations.
I invested $13,000 — the entirety of my savings at the time — on the explicit, written promise of more than double my money within 30 days. It has now been two years. I have received nothing. Communication with Balaji Subbu and Hamsini Entertainment became progressively impossible: messages were read and ignored, calls went unanswered, and every attempt to reach anyone connected to the business has failed entirely.
Investor — NHS professional $450,000 lost VerifiedIndependently verified through screenshots of direct communications with Hamsini Entertainment, bank transfer receipts confirming payment, and written investment representations.
I work for the NHS. I saved carefully over many years and was persuaded to invest the majority of those savings on the basis of specific, explicit guarantees: triple returns within 90 days of a named film's theatrical release, and a personal assurance that my original capital was fully protected regardless of how the film performed. The film underperformed. My capital was not returned. I am owed in excess of $450,000 — the accumulated savings of my working life. I have a family of four. The financial consequences have been catastrophic, and the psychological toll severe. I trusted these people completely. That trust has cost me everything.
Investor — private individual $25,000 lost VerifiedIndependently verified through screenshots of direct communications with Hamsini Entertainment, bank transfer receipts confirming payment, and written investment representations.
I transferred $25,000 to Hamsini Entertainment on the basis of a fixed, guaranteed return within six months — a commitment made explicitly and in writing. That period has long since elapsed. No payment has been received. No acknowledgement of the debt has been offered. My messages go entirely unanswered. On one occasion I attended an address associated with Balaji Subbu in person — he was not present. He has, by every available indicator, made himself completely unreachable.
Investor — introduced via Deepa Iyer $64,000+ lost VerifiedIndependently verified through screenshots of direct communications with Hamsini Entertainment and Deepa Iyer, bank transfer receipts, and signed investment agreements.
I was directly approached and encouraged to invest by Deepa Iyer, who presented the opportunity with total confidence and provided personal assurances of its legitimacy and safety. On the strength of those assurances I committed in excess of $64,000 across a theatrical distribution and production deal, with a clear understanding that my capital would be returned within 12 months. Not a single cent has been returned. Both Deepa Iyer and Balaji Subbu are now entirely unreachable. The harm this has caused — financially and personally — is serious, ongoing, and wholly the result of the false representations made to me.
Investor — private individual $320,000 lost VerifiedIndependently verified through screenshots of direct communications with Hamsini Entertainment, bank transfer receipts confirming both payments, and written investment representations.
I initially invested $190,000 and received nothing in return. When I pressed for answers, I was told that certain deals between Hamsini Entertainment and a production house in India had collapsed, making it impossible to return my initial capital without a further commitment. I was told that Hamsini was acquiring a multi-film theatrical distribution package and that both my original funds and profits would be returned within three to four months. On that basis, I invested a further $130,000. Not a cent of either investment has been returned. Balaji Subbu refuses to take my calls, and on the rare occasion I have reached him, his only response has been to tell me to pursue the matter through the courts. The total I am owed is $320,000. The financial damage to my family has been profound. I am experiencing serious depression and thoughts of self-harm as a direct result of what has been done to me.
If you are experiencing thoughts of self-harm or suicide, help is available right now. Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline — free, confidential, available 24/7). You can also text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line). You are not alone.