The story’s broad contours will really feel acquainted. Those with no voice toil whereas enterprise heads revenue from their labour, making certain that individuals can’t take issues into their very own palms. When the oppressed are pushed to the brink, insurrection turns into inevitable, and each insurrection, after all, wants a frontrunner.
Ghaati (Telugu)
Director: Krish Jagarlamudi
Cast: Anushka Shetty, Vikram Prabhu, Jagapathi Babu, Ravindra Vijay, Chaitanya Rao
Run time: 156 minutes
Story: A lady has to rise in opposition to highly effective forces to avenge the injustice to her and her group.
The setting injects a contemporary flavour into a well-known story. The Eastern Ghats, round Koraput on the Andhra-Odisha border, are steeped in real-life accounts of police seizing large marijuana hauls. The native porters, referred to as ghaatis, traditionally helped the British lay roads throughout the mountains, ferrying lots of of kilograms up steep slopes. Ghaati, written by Chintakindi Srinivas Rao with a screenplay by Krish Jagarlamudi and dialogues by Sai Madhav Burra, makes use of this terrain to offer a brand new spin to a standard revenge drama.
Manojh Reddy Katasani’s cinematography captures the ghaatis in sweeping fowl’s-eye photographs, their diminutive frames framed in opposition to towering mountains. Up shut, their resilience emerges vividly. The narrative accelerates from the primary hour, portraying the gruelling life of those mountain porters.
Anushka Shetty enters matter-of-factly, with no slow-motion or grand reveals. She is a bus conductor, trying ahead to marrying her childhood sweetheart, Desi Raju (Vikram Prabhu). In the opening bus sequence, a delicate ‘mass’ second hints at her latent power. Her character, Sheelavathy, has a backstory linked to quite a lot of hashish grown on the ghats.
Several supporting characters are launched — Jagapathi Babu as a police officer, and Ravindra Vijay and Chaitanya Rao as enterprise tycoons. The story sometimes evokes Pushpa: The Rise, notably in scenes the place cartel leaders resist the ghaatis encroaching on their operations. Repetitive dialogue underscores the exploitative mindset of those males, which, whereas harking back to different movies, additionally displays common oppressor dynamics.
The narrative shifts to Sheelavathy’s transformation right into a drive to be reckoned with, echoing tales like Phoolan Devi’s. It stays a predictable trope of mainstream cinema. Performances are strong throughout the board — Anushka, Vikram Prabhu, Ravindra Vijay, and Chaitanya Rao — however using sexual violence as a plot machine and the persistent male gaze are predictable and distract from the story’s potential.
The movie excels in world-building: festivals are celebrated with a mixture of Andhra and Odisha flavours, costumes (by Aishwarya Rajeev) pop with regional vibrancy, and Sheelavathy’s romance with Desi Raju is heat and endearing, with a key reveal after the primary hour including momentum. Yet, all this promise wanes because the narrative follows a predictable trajectory.
Later sequences concentrate on Sheelavathy’s revenge. Anushka delivers with conviction, proudly owning the motion choreography and mass moments. She hauls lots of of kilograms, fends off a dozen males without delay, and dominates the display screen. Visual metaphors abound, from Sita setting Lanka ablaze to Goddess Durga, however after a degree, these extended sequences and the relentless massacre begins to exhaust the viewer. Some intelligent plotting or thoughts video games rather than brute drive might have elevated the climax.
The movie usually spells out what visuals already convey. A characters declares, “This is artwork and she or he is a superb artist,” or name her a “insurgent queen;” the latter reference is a nod to Prabhas being known as ‘insurgent star’. These moments, nevertheless, really feel over-explained reasonably than natural.
It stays Anushka’s present, although just a few others go away an impression. Vikram Prabhu exudes quiet power in distinction to Anushka’s ferocity. Chaitanya Rao, contemporary from Maya Sabha, channels pure villainy, with costume cues from vibrant bling to monochrome signalling shifts in motive. Ravindra Vijay conveys calculated menace, whereas Jagapathi Babu retains the viewers guessing as a shapeshifter. Sagar Nagavelli’s music enhances the early parts however ultimately succumbs to the movie’s general loudness.
Ghaati begins with promise however by no means fairly reaches it. Krish Jagarlamudi isn’t any stranger to immersive storytelling in uncommon settings, but this time, the narrative is certain by formulaic beats, leaving the movie much less compelling than it might have been.








