Movie: Maha Samudram
Rating: 2.25/5
Cast: Sharwanand, Siddharth, Aditi Rao Hydari, Anu Emanuel, Jagapathi Babu, Rao Ramesh
Director: Ajay Bhupathi
Produced By: Ramabrahmam Sunkara under AK Entertainments banner
Release Date: 14th October 2021
Maha Samudram right through its promotional content has promised to showcase a tale of ‘immeasurable love’. This tale, however, comes laced with a gangster backdrop and features a story of friendship, love, and hunger for power. The ‘immeasurable love’ part doesn’t get justified enough. Has Ajay Bhupathi managed to deliver a great mix of emotions with action? Can he replicate the success of his RX100? Let’s find out
Story: The story basically chronicles the journey of Arjun (Sharwanand) and Vijay (Siddharth). The duo share an inseparable bond and are a force to reckon with together. Arjun is in love with Smitha (Anu Emanuel) while Vijay loves Maha ( Aditi Rao Hydari). All is going well when hell breaks loose and cracks form in the friendship of Vijay and Arjun. What follows next is a tale of betrayal, power, and redemption.
Performance: Sharwanand is ever so dependable in the role of an angry young man. His dialogue delivery and screen presence are appreciable. While Siddharth is playing the secondary lead and is more of a supporting character, he breaks away from his soft image and does well in the grey character. His action sequences are also impressive and unexpected from an actor of his image. Jagapathy Babu as Chunchu Mama is the shining star of the film and does complete justice to the screen time. His characterization is really well done and his look and body language are fascinating. Rao Ramesh fits into the role well while the female leads Aditi Rao Hydari and Anu Emanuel are sparingly utilized. Especially in the case of Anu Emanuel, the audience might feel the track is present just to justify the tagline of ‘immeasurable love’.
Analysis: One of the greatest strengths of Maha Samudram is the characterizations and casting. Each character has a reason for their actions and that is really refreshing to watch. The writing has its positive moments but the slow screenplay especially in the second half and certain repeated and cliched moments from Ajay Bhupathi brings down the momentum of the film. While the first half and especially the excellent interval bang is the strength of the film, a decent second half would have made a massive difference to the film’s fortunes.
Plus Points:
Sharwanand and Siddharth chemistry
Interval Bang
Cinematography
Minus Points:
Slow narration
The second half lets down
Weak screenplay
Verdict: Maha Samudram is a decent second outing by Ajay Bhupathi and a smart comeback to Tollywood by Siddharth. The movie has its high moments which would certainly give the viewers an adrenaline rush. However, the dull moments outweigh the big mass moments and in a gangster drama that means bad news. The action episodes are definitely to watch out for. Watch it if the genre interests you.
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