Bagheera
- 2024
- 2h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
7.4K
YOUR RATING
When society turns into a jungle, just one predator cries out for justice.When society turns into a jungle, just one predator cries out for justice.When society turns into a jungle, just one predator cries out for justice.
Featured reviews
I noticed this movie trending in the top list on Hotstar for quite some time, which prompted me to give it a shot. I'm glad I did, as it turned out to be a decent timepass.
When justice and the system turn a blind eye, an honest police officer transforms into a superhero to protect the people. He takes it upon himself to clean the city by eliminating a powerful crime syndicate.
The concept of a hero becoming a messiah isn't unique, but the way it unfolds makes it interesting. The narrative moves at a brisk pace with enough drama, action, and a touch of romance to keep the audience engaged. However, the story has its share of loopholes, and the punchy dialogues one would expect from a movie like this are missing.
Sri Murali, in the lead, fits the role both physically and performance-wise. He embodies the character well, and his screen presence lights up the film. Rukmini Vasanth, as his love interest, does justice to her role, but their entire romantic subplot could have been trimmed for better pacing, especially since their chemistry feels off. Garuda Ram, as the antagonist, is menacing and his burnt look adds to the discomfort he creates. Prakash Raj delivers a solid performance, though his character feels inconsistent. Rangayana Raghu is brilliant as the constable, adding depth to narrative.
The action sequences are well-shot and choreographed, keeping you glued to the screen. However, some of the graphics feel a bit patchy. The songs don't add much value and only stretch the runtime unnecessarily. On the bright side, the superhero's look is well-designed, delivering the intended vibe.
With a stronger and more unique storyline, this film had the potential to be much better. Dr. Suri's direction is commendable, but Prashanth Neel's story drags it down. Still, it's worth watching as a visual spectacle and a decent one-time watch.
#PranuReviews #Bagheera #BagheeraReview.
When justice and the system turn a blind eye, an honest police officer transforms into a superhero to protect the people. He takes it upon himself to clean the city by eliminating a powerful crime syndicate.
The concept of a hero becoming a messiah isn't unique, but the way it unfolds makes it interesting. The narrative moves at a brisk pace with enough drama, action, and a touch of romance to keep the audience engaged. However, the story has its share of loopholes, and the punchy dialogues one would expect from a movie like this are missing.
Sri Murali, in the lead, fits the role both physically and performance-wise. He embodies the character well, and his screen presence lights up the film. Rukmini Vasanth, as his love interest, does justice to her role, but their entire romantic subplot could have been trimmed for better pacing, especially since their chemistry feels off. Garuda Ram, as the antagonist, is menacing and his burnt look adds to the discomfort he creates. Prakash Raj delivers a solid performance, though his character feels inconsistent. Rangayana Raghu is brilliant as the constable, adding depth to narrative.
The action sequences are well-shot and choreographed, keeping you glued to the screen. However, some of the graphics feel a bit patchy. The songs don't add much value and only stretch the runtime unnecessarily. On the bright side, the superhero's look is well-designed, delivering the intended vibe.
With a stronger and more unique storyline, this film had the potential to be much better. Dr. Suri's direction is commendable, but Prashanth Neel's story drags it down. Still, it's worth watching as a visual spectacle and a decent one-time watch.
#PranuReviews #Bagheera #BagheeraReview.
A very average commercial entertainer! Absolutely nothing new in the storyline, same old story of the main lead trying to be a super hero by saving the masses in complete disguise as Bagheera. He single-handedly does fight hundreds together hooligans backed by weapons, guns etc without getting himself hurt, a totally unrealistic picture to believe into. But as an action entertainer, quite an average one. Originally a Kannada movie dubbed in all South Indian languages. Available in Netflix, my ratings 5/10!
A very average commercial entertainer! Absolutely nothing new in the storyline, same old story of the main lead trying to be a super hero by saving the masses in complete disguise as Bagheera. He single-handedly does fight hundreds together hooligans backed by weapons, guns etc without getting himself hurt, a totally unrealistic picture to believe into. But as an action entertainer, quite an average one. Originally a Kannada movie dubbed in all South Indian languages. Available in Netflix, my ratings 5/10!
A very average commercial entertainer! Absolutely nothing new in the storyline, same old story of the main lead trying to be a super hero by saving the masses in complete disguise as Bagheera. He single-handedly does fight hundreds together hooligans backed by weapons, guns etc without getting himself hurt, a totally unrealistic picture to believe into. But as an action entertainer, quite an average one. Originally a Kannada movie dubbed in all South Indian languages. Available in Netflix, my ratings 5/10!
Vedanth aspires to be a superhero and jumps from a building, fracturing his leg. His mother assures him that the one who wears a cape is not the only superhero by giving his cop father as an example. Vedanth decides to become a cop like his father. Years later, he has achieved his dream and gets his posting in Mangaluru. Vedanth being a strict and honest police officer, raids the criminals in his jurisdiction and tries to clean up the city. However, he is soon stopped by his superior which shatters his dream to serve his best as a cop. The atrocities don't stop, forcing Vedanth to don a mask and mete out vigilante justice as Bagheera. What happens when he is pitted against a ruthless villain Rana, forms rest of the story.
Narrated in 7 chapters, Bagheera is an ambitious vigilante action film whose story is written by Prashanth Neel. On paper it definitely sounds good but it is the lackluster screenplay by Dr. Suri that undermines the story. The first half is quite below average with back to back outdated scenes involving Vedanth the cop. The film works only when Bagheera enters and that too when he is in action. Dr. Suri failed to take advantage of a origin story and the token supporting cast get too many generic scenes. The action blocks do stand out and it is indeed good to not show Bagheera as invincible. The half baked love story doesn't contribute much.
It is the second half where it focuses more on Bagheera going after the main baddie and parallely, CBI starts the hunt for Bagheera. This intriguing plot is again underwhelmingly executed and though, Vedanth prepping himself as Bagheera with gadgets and stuff is a cool idea, the way the director presents it instantly loses it's impact. I get it, superhero/vigilante films are not to be taken too seriously but the unlikely team Vedanth forms is laughable. The other negative is the two songs that are forgettable. This leaves Bagheera with the action blocks and an ambitious climax fight on a freight train. The vfx is good with few obvious glitches. The vision of Bagheera should have been truly backed with good writing, which sadly doesn't happen. I am going with a lenient rating for the attempt but the film offers nothing memorable.
Narrated in 7 chapters, Bagheera is an ambitious vigilante action film whose story is written by Prashanth Neel. On paper it definitely sounds good but it is the lackluster screenplay by Dr. Suri that undermines the story. The first half is quite below average with back to back outdated scenes involving Vedanth the cop. The film works only when Bagheera enters and that too when he is in action. Dr. Suri failed to take advantage of a origin story and the token supporting cast get too many generic scenes. The action blocks do stand out and it is indeed good to not show Bagheera as invincible. The half baked love story doesn't contribute much.
It is the second half where it focuses more on Bagheera going after the main baddie and parallely, CBI starts the hunt for Bagheera. This intriguing plot is again underwhelmingly executed and though, Vedanth prepping himself as Bagheera with gadgets and stuff is a cool idea, the way the director presents it instantly loses it's impact. I get it, superhero/vigilante films are not to be taken too seriously but the unlikely team Vedanth forms is laughable. The other negative is the two songs that are forgettable. This leaves Bagheera with the action blocks and an ambitious climax fight on a freight train. The vfx is good with few obvious glitches. The vision of Bagheera should have been truly backed with good writing, which sadly doesn't happen. I am going with a lenient rating for the attempt but the film offers nothing memorable.
I was excited to watch Bagheera, because it was a story by Prashanth Neel, and that Hombale was producing it. On top of that, it was a vigilante superhero film. All three ingredients set for a massive blockbuster that should've changed the landscape of action-superhero storytelling in India. And as a Telugite, I wanted to support good Kannada films, after the debacle that was Martin, and my own love for the land of Karnataka.
I was really geared up to witness something defining, and guess what... Boy, does it fail to live up to the hype that I had from a Prashant Neel story in the hands of another vision. And why was that?
What this film had was a crazy, out of the box idea about a policeman-gone-vigilante. I really found the concept to be interesting, and pretty unique as I've seldom seen law enforcement officers take up the mantle of a vigilante to exact justice upon criminals. This was a cool reversal of the trope of superheroes coming from ordinary backgrounds.
BINARY APPROACH: To understand why it didn't work for me, I'd have to say that characters don't seem to develop beyond binaries. Where the first half sets up the conflict between righteousness and corruption, where the protagonist (VEDANTH, played by Sri Murali) is a noble police officer and the system around him is being corrupted, the noble cop abandons hope and takes the law in his own hands. Beyond that, the protagonist has zero character development, except he has to overcome obstacles and kill people. That's it.
And then comes the antagonist (RANA, played by Garuda Ram), introduced sporadically in the first half and becomes the focal point in the second half. This is where the movie truly and absolutely fails--totally fails--to build an interesting and menacing antagonist. All attempts here to build an interesting antagonist goes in vain, to make him come off as a generic, two-dimensional villain with no depth or character arc to him. He is a pure villain for the villain sake and offers nothing of thoughtfulness. His one snippet of his childhood cruelty is reduced to a caricature-ish portrayal of evil, rather than something of human value or tragic backstory or so.
This binary approach to the antagonist, and the protagonist, fail to inject life into the narrative, despite glimpses of moments which offer you a look into the flaws of the hero (him drinking in the uniform and losing hope and stuff). But there's not a single emotional flaw or vulnerability in the antagonist, making him come off as cartoony. Maybe it's my fault to expect well-developed antagonists from a Prashant Neel story, so I'll leave that aside.
FIRST HALF GOOD, SECOND HALF BAD: Okay, I don't like this kind of argument because it invalidates the movie-going experience to the same binary nonsense above.
Because the fundamental flaw is not the making of the second half, but the 2nd act and 3rd act itself. The first half is pretty good, where the setup to the first act really engages you with the Mysore backdrop, some fun comedy with the station officers, some drama between the corrupt locals and the uncorrupt Vedanth, interesting goonies and bad guys, and some killer shots of "Roaring Star" Sri Murali walking in his police uniform. When Vedanth is overburdened by the system to stop being so noble, he loses hope, and in his hopeless state, he witnesses something very brutal that he changes his mind completely to become a vigilante called Bagheera. Bagheera goes on a rampage, killing the goons responsible for the brutality he witnessed, and that pushes him deep into the main plot/conflict. The main plot/conflict that Bagheera has to confront is that the antagonist plans a shipment of people to send to Srilanka, where they harvest their organs for black-market; and Bagheera has to stop the antagonist from doing so, while evading the crackdown of Bagheera by the CBI after a corrupt police officer brother of a CBI officer (GURU, played by Prakash Raj) gets murdered by Bagheera. The main plot of organ harvesting, with the subplot of the CBI investigating Bagheera, forms the main story which doesn't really explore anything beyond, "Bad guy does bad things, until good guy comes and kills the bad guys." (forget about the mother who inspires him to be a superhero, the dramatic conflict about corruption with his dad that goes nowhere, and the irrelevant heroine that expires with no rhyme or reason, just to push the story forward) At least, Prashant Neel did a better job with the catharsis when the good guy kills the bad guy than what Dr. Suri does half-heartedly here. It comes off more a commercial potboiler nonsense that plagues Telugu cinema, as opposed to something that's new-age. One wonders why Hombale would even go in that direction when it brought a refined, Hollywood aesthetic with KGF, Kantara and Salaar.
Anyways, coming back to the plot, the second half becomes a monotonous chore, as the plot moves from one scene to the next, without any real conflict for the protagonist to confront. There's some passable fight scenes, as the CBI tracks down his identity, and that identity leaks to the antagonist Rana, where he captures the love interest of Bagheera and gives him a choice to save the civilians or his lover; and it is from that point, the film turns into a pile of hot mess. The police capture Bagheera and then when he's taken for an encounter, the twist is that Bagheera is treated innocent by Guru, after actually knowing why Bagheera did that, and then lets him off with the location of Rana. Bagheera goes to find Rana, where he is in a cargo train enroute, to traffic the humans he kidnapped to Sri Lanka. Bagheera kills Rana and his goons, and saves the day. That's it. "Bad guy does bad things, until good guy comes and kills the bad guys." After some half-hearted set-up for a sequel, the movie ends.
Overall, I have to say, by the end of film, I was pretty exhausted despite the exhilarating enthusiasm I had in the beginning, for the entertainment I was looking forward to. Despite great cinematography, a killer soundtrack by Ajaneesh Loknath, the film leaves nothing to take away (except the song, "Rudhira Dhaara"), no real "elevations" that you expect from a Prashant Neel story.
I was really geared up to witness something defining, and guess what... Boy, does it fail to live up to the hype that I had from a Prashant Neel story in the hands of another vision. And why was that?
What this film had was a crazy, out of the box idea about a policeman-gone-vigilante. I really found the concept to be interesting, and pretty unique as I've seldom seen law enforcement officers take up the mantle of a vigilante to exact justice upon criminals. This was a cool reversal of the trope of superheroes coming from ordinary backgrounds.
BINARY APPROACH: To understand why it didn't work for me, I'd have to say that characters don't seem to develop beyond binaries. Where the first half sets up the conflict between righteousness and corruption, where the protagonist (VEDANTH, played by Sri Murali) is a noble police officer and the system around him is being corrupted, the noble cop abandons hope and takes the law in his own hands. Beyond that, the protagonist has zero character development, except he has to overcome obstacles and kill people. That's it.
And then comes the antagonist (RANA, played by Garuda Ram), introduced sporadically in the first half and becomes the focal point in the second half. This is where the movie truly and absolutely fails--totally fails--to build an interesting and menacing antagonist. All attempts here to build an interesting antagonist goes in vain, to make him come off as a generic, two-dimensional villain with no depth or character arc to him. He is a pure villain for the villain sake and offers nothing of thoughtfulness. His one snippet of his childhood cruelty is reduced to a caricature-ish portrayal of evil, rather than something of human value or tragic backstory or so.
This binary approach to the antagonist, and the protagonist, fail to inject life into the narrative, despite glimpses of moments which offer you a look into the flaws of the hero (him drinking in the uniform and losing hope and stuff). But there's not a single emotional flaw or vulnerability in the antagonist, making him come off as cartoony. Maybe it's my fault to expect well-developed antagonists from a Prashant Neel story, so I'll leave that aside.
FIRST HALF GOOD, SECOND HALF BAD: Okay, I don't like this kind of argument because it invalidates the movie-going experience to the same binary nonsense above.
Because the fundamental flaw is not the making of the second half, but the 2nd act and 3rd act itself. The first half is pretty good, where the setup to the first act really engages you with the Mysore backdrop, some fun comedy with the station officers, some drama between the corrupt locals and the uncorrupt Vedanth, interesting goonies and bad guys, and some killer shots of "Roaring Star" Sri Murali walking in his police uniform. When Vedanth is overburdened by the system to stop being so noble, he loses hope, and in his hopeless state, he witnesses something very brutal that he changes his mind completely to become a vigilante called Bagheera. Bagheera goes on a rampage, killing the goons responsible for the brutality he witnessed, and that pushes him deep into the main plot/conflict. The main plot/conflict that Bagheera has to confront is that the antagonist plans a shipment of people to send to Srilanka, where they harvest their organs for black-market; and Bagheera has to stop the antagonist from doing so, while evading the crackdown of Bagheera by the CBI after a corrupt police officer brother of a CBI officer (GURU, played by Prakash Raj) gets murdered by Bagheera. The main plot of organ harvesting, with the subplot of the CBI investigating Bagheera, forms the main story which doesn't really explore anything beyond, "Bad guy does bad things, until good guy comes and kills the bad guys." (forget about the mother who inspires him to be a superhero, the dramatic conflict about corruption with his dad that goes nowhere, and the irrelevant heroine that expires with no rhyme or reason, just to push the story forward) At least, Prashant Neel did a better job with the catharsis when the good guy kills the bad guy than what Dr. Suri does half-heartedly here. It comes off more a commercial potboiler nonsense that plagues Telugu cinema, as opposed to something that's new-age. One wonders why Hombale would even go in that direction when it brought a refined, Hollywood aesthetic with KGF, Kantara and Salaar.
Anyways, coming back to the plot, the second half becomes a monotonous chore, as the plot moves from one scene to the next, without any real conflict for the protagonist to confront. There's some passable fight scenes, as the CBI tracks down his identity, and that identity leaks to the antagonist Rana, where he captures the love interest of Bagheera and gives him a choice to save the civilians or his lover; and it is from that point, the film turns into a pile of hot mess. The police capture Bagheera and then when he's taken for an encounter, the twist is that Bagheera is treated innocent by Guru, after actually knowing why Bagheera did that, and then lets him off with the location of Rana. Bagheera goes to find Rana, where he is in a cargo train enroute, to traffic the humans he kidnapped to Sri Lanka. Bagheera kills Rana and his goons, and saves the day. That's it. "Bad guy does bad things, until good guy comes and kills the bad guys." After some half-hearted set-up for a sequel, the movie ends.
Overall, I have to say, by the end of film, I was pretty exhausted despite the exhilarating enthusiasm I had in the beginning, for the entertainment I was looking forward to. Despite great cinematography, a killer soundtrack by Ajaneesh Loknath, the film leaves nothing to take away (except the song, "Rudhira Dhaara"), no real "elevations" that you expect from a Prashant Neel story.
As good as the first half of the movie is , the second half is equally disappointing. The movie is backed by amazing background score by ajneesh loknath and an extraordinary acting by Shri murli. First half of the story was really good, I went back in looking for a promising second half but the scenes were lagged unnecessarily, Action scenes are dragged unnecessarily by the director. Though every actor have delivered their 100% , the wow factor in the movie is Majorly missing. But overall it was a good theatre experience, if anyone wants to go to theatre to watch this movie, you'll definitely have a good one time watch experience.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSri Murali's second collaboration with Prashanth Neel. Both worked together on the latter's directorial debut (Ugramm), which was released a decade before this movie.
- How long is Bagheera?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Багира
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $13,454
- Runtime2 hours 38 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1
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