In Balagam, debut director Venu Yeldandi’s Telugu film set in rural Telangana, a woman wails whereas recalling how the aged man who has breathed his final had all the time relished the tea she served and requested for 2 extra spoons of sugar and had additionally enquired if she is making fish pulusu. It’s powerful to not crack up as she says this due to what has transpired earlier. An aged man’s passing and a motley group of villagers paying their obeisance with excessive drama open the stage for roaring laughter. Within the subsequent two hours, the narrative lays naked human behaviour, full with bloated egos that may fracture familial ties over easy points.
Komarayya (Sudhakar Reddy) just isn’t the likeable grandfather within the village. He’s gregarious but additionally oblivious to the impact of his sharp statements and actions on these round him. Acharya Venu’s digital camera leads us into rural Telangana with its hills, fields and homes because the catchy ‘Maa ooru pallettooru’ composed by Bheems Ceciroleo performs on, unfolding a day within the lifetime of Komarayya. Sudhakar Reddy performs Komarayya with a straightforward manner, convincing in his character’s exuberance and melancholy. Quickly, we’re inquisitive about what’s in his bag that he holds pricey to him.
Balagam
Forged: Priyadarshi, Kavya Kalyanram, Muralidhar Goud
Path: Venu Yeldandi
Music: Bheems Cecerolio
Komarayya’s sudden demise brings collectively his sons, daughter, their youngsters, prolonged family and the villagers. The grandson Sailu (Priyadarshi) who has been hoping to get engaged, get a fats dowry and repay his money owed, is shattered. Elsewhere, a tailor (the director doing the honours for a short, fascinating half) goes into utter shock and retains reiterating a few strains that become each humorous and poignant.
Venu Yeldandi makes use of the patriarch’s loss of life, the funeral and the rituals thereafter to depict household politics. Demise turns into an excuse for a number of feasts accompanied by alcohol; a half-baked romance collapses solely to open the stage for a brand new one, and somebody squabbles over land. Briefly, life takes a 360-degree flip when the drive that binds a household is gone.
Hindi movies similar to Ramprasad ki Tehrvi and Pagglait, and the Kannada movie Thithi come to thoughts for his or her exploration of loss of life and household politics, however it’s a new territory in Telugu.
Balagam additionally turns its lens on how girls bear the brunt of males dictating the principles of engagement in a household. When the humour wears off after some extent, the drama across the rituals feels stretched. However, these parts serve the aim of creating the villagers and relations look inwards and search solutions as to whether they’re really grieving for a departed soul.
Priyadarshi just isn’t new to enjoying an underdog, on a regular basis man. The truth that he can do it believably, with none artifice, after a number of years in his profession, is praiseworthy. The early romance scenes and his predicament at how the village of us deal with his snooker desk are hilarious; when he does some soul-searching in the direction of the top, he prompts others to comply with go well with. Kavya Kalyanram, Muralidhar Goud (the daddy in DJ Tillu), Sudhakar Reddy, Racha Ravi, Roopa and Jayaram are good suits for his or her components. The a number of supporting actors who enact the components of individuals within the village lend authenticity to the movie.
It’s been lengthy since we’ve got seen a rooted, indie-style Telugu movie that explores subcultures of the Telugu states the best way a Care of Kancharapalem or a Mallesham did. Balagam is a welcome addition to that checklist.