MAGADHEERA!

Where to start? Well, after reading this awesome review by the always interesting Post-Punk Cinema Club we knew we  HAD to see this film. Hindi cinema has been disappointing of late for those of us who love full throttle all singing all dancing all biffo masala films, and we both sensed this may just hit the spot. Months of googling, emailing, staring forlornly at shop shelves here (and by Heather when in Chennai) was finally put to rest with the DVD release! Yay! We rejoiced, and we ordered quick smart (shameless plug for the excellent Raj and Bhavani DVD).  A select viewing audience was assembled (including  two Mumbai born Hindi speakers and hardcore filmi fans) and we settled in. Only to find out Heather had cheated and watched it on her own. This might have destroyed our friendship but it did have the benefit of allowing her to lunge across the couch and announce “This is VERY SIGNIFICANT!” at relevant points of the film. We are still friends.

OMG. What a ride this film was!

From the heart-string-tuggingly beautiful opening scenes to the joyous end credits, we lapped it up. We have a charismatic young hero with hair that loves a wind machine , a despicable but well accessorised villain, a heroine with some common sense but not much to do, dancing, music, explosions, swords, horses, tigers and ye olden days. And an elephant!

The story spans 400 years or so and tells of Kala Bhairava (played by Ram Charan)and his love for Princess Mithravinda (played by Kajal Aggarwal). Through the machinations of the despicable villain, Rana Dev Billa, the young couple die before they ever get their love lives sorted out and so their story is incomplete. Jump forward 400 years, and who could it be exploding off the screen riding his motorcycle through the clouds? Yes. Harsha aka Bhairava is back and that can only mean one thing. Two plus hours of getting the girl and triumphing over the forces of evil!

Mumaith Khan and her powerful chest in an unintentional(?) Baywatch Jiggle Run tribute is perhaps a sign that this is going to be one for the boys.

But the item girls are overshadowed by Ram Charan’s awesome dancing and so the eye candy quotient seems to be there for all.

One of the major disappointments in recent Hindi films is the boring montage instead of a proper multi-costumed spangly dance. Thankfully, Tollywood seems to still have a commitment to the kind of entertainment that we love. We did ponder whether it was the actors who can dance so well that makes this possible or are the actors who can’t dance so well just overlooked and never blight the viewers eye? MAGADHEERA takes full advantage of excellent backing dancers and a hero with a thoroughbred pedigree. We loved seeing Chiru turn up in his special appearance, maybe almost as much as these guys did!

In fact, we both loved MAGADHEERA so much, it has become the first step in our South Indian Cinema Induction programme. Guests are required to watch MAGADHEERA (snacks and chaat provided of course) and later they must discuss the strange allure of the Southern Hero Ishtyle. Phase 2 of the programme will be revealed in coming weeks…

Suitably inspired by David and Margaret “At The Movies”:

Heather says: Lions and tigers and bears, Oh My!  Or rather horses, tigers and (an) elephant!  This movie really has everything,  and manages to tell a rather overused storyline in such an inspired way.  There is enough comedy without it being obtrusive and annoying as I’ve found can be the case in Indian cinema.  Meanwhile the drama quotient is high, performances excellent with great casting and very good use of CGI. The dancing was awesome and technical enough to appease even those of us channeling Jason Coleman from SYTYCD.  Good guys win, bad guys don’t (eventually) and there is plenty of mayhem and blood shed in the process .  And the final song over the end credits is the best ever!!    Loved it so much I watched it 3 times in as many days, and still feel a week isn’t complete without just a little MAGADHEERA in it somewhere.  This is a full five star movie.

Temple says: What I loved about this film is the wide eyed serious commitment to the truth of the story, with no irony or raised eyebrows to undermine the impact. I had a discussion with a good friend about this – she felt it was a bit too testosterone laden and serious to be palatable as a viewer and she wanted some sign of irony. I love the all out all in drama and while there is some unintentional humour, I reckon I was laughing with the film and not at it most of the time. As a viewer I want to get swept up and dragged along by a film, I want to cheer the good guys and hiss at the baddies, I want to try and dance along and have the songs stuck in my head for ages.  I can honestly say MAGADHEERA delivers all this and more! If the number of times we paused the DVD to look at each other and just marvel at the stunts, the drama, the sheer fun is any indication, this is a classic! Go watch it if you haven’t already. Seriously – go now! I give this five stars!

18 thoughts on “MAGADHEERA!

  1. I reckon, the one thing that must be said is: it should be watched with the right company… actually this goes for any of these films.

    In retrospect, I loved (yes, loved… :-P) watching it with you know who 😉

    Like

    • Thanks Mehul! We loved, yes loved, watching it with you guys too! In fact, at one stage we considered naming the review “Her Chunni is KILLING me!” as a tribute to your valuable insights 😀

      Like

  2. Loved the “masala-ness”of the film – glad you guys made me try something other than Siddharth movies when it came to Tollywood 😉 Beginning to really appreciate the works of SS Rajmouli as I’ve just finished watching Yamadonga as well from Heather’s library 😀

    Like

  3. Pingback: Brindaavanam « Cinema Chaat

  4. Pingback: Australian Festival of Travel Writing – the road to Tollywood « Cinema Chaat

  5. Pingback: Happy « Cinema Chaat

  6. Oh… Lovely it is so Interesting. magadeera really nice movie in toll wood industry ram char an dance very well i love bangaru kodipetta song really enjoy this blog….thanks for the video collection nice blog

    Bharat

    Like

  7. Pingback: Episode 4: The One With Masala and Warriors - Magadheera | Tripple Eggs Podcast Co.

  8. Pingback: On Watching Indian Cinema in Sunny Melbourne

  9. Someone was recommending this movie to me; they hated Baahubali 2, by the way.

    I do wish I could watch a film with you guys; I have a feeling there will be several pauses, several rewinds, and several drinks over several watchings.

    p.s. By the way, I’m too lazy to go back and check who reviewed Mithunam but we watched it the other day, and my husband wants me to tell you that if he met you on a dark night, you’d better watch out. 🙂 Gosh, that was a drag, you two! And I wanted to drown SP halfway through the film. The only thing interesting about it was the food. Lots of food. 🙂 🙂

    Like

    • I was thinking of MAGADHEERA recently (I always spell it in all caps 🙂 ) and how impressive it is, and Rajamouli’s skills have continually evolved. So many of the narrative and visual tricks of Baahubali are there in MAGADHEERA or even Yamadonga but on a less bold scale. Anyway I’d always be up for watching a movie with you Anu. And I think you’d be safe with me and I’d be safe on that dark night as Heather wrote about Mithunam (which I found tedious) 😉

      I have a colleague who hates Shahrukh with a passion but her husband is an SRK fan. The husband keeps asking my colleague to invite me round for dinner because I sound like a good person as a fellow SRK positive human. We all find our people, I guess!

      Like

    • Mithunam – That was me! Maybe I enjoyed it more because I often stay on a farm in Tamil Nadu, which is really similar – only with chickens and goats instead of the cow! I also come from a farming background and it reminded me of my own grandparents. 😀
      I really liked it anyway – it had a European feel for me and made me think of home. Although maybe that was all the food too!
      I’ll make sure to be careful on dark nights then! Just in case…..
      Magadheera is awesome! I have several copies that I routinely loan out to people and it usually gets them hooked on SI cinema!

      Like

  10. Heh heh, you two. My husband’s weapon lies in making me laugh. So I don’t think you need to whip out the pepper spray just yet. 🙂

    We should get together! If you ever come to New England, let out a holler! I’ll gather some more of our tribe and we can have a blast.

    @Temple – you found Mithunam tedious, too? Bless you! 🙂

    So now I have to watch Magadheera. Will see if it is on Netflix so I can stream it to the TV, instead of my laptop screen.

    Like

Say something!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.