Review: ‘Bhairavam,’ starring Sai Srinivas Bellamkonda, Manchu Manoj and Nara Rohith

June 1, 2025

by Carla Hay

Manoj Manchu, Bellamkonda Sai Sreenivas, Jayasudha and Nara Rohith in “Bhairavam” (Photo courtesy of Prathyangira Cinemas)

“Bhairavam”

Directed by Abishan Jeevinth

Telugu with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in India, the action film “Bhairavam” (a remake of the 2024 film “Garudan”) features an all-Asian cast of characters representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: Three best friends experience violent power struggles over control of a sacred temple and the land around the temple. 

Culture Audience: “Bhairavam” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners, “Garudan” and predictable action movies about loyalties and betrayals among family members and friends.

Sharath Lohithaswa in “Bhairavam” (Photo courtesy of Prathyangira Cinemas)

“Bhairavam” is a stale and clumsy story of three best friends and betrayals over control of a scared temple. This bloated and repetitive Telugu remake of the Tamil film “Garudan” is just a dull collection of violent fights and vapid acting performances. The movie’s song-and-dance numbers are mediocre and unnecessary.

Written and directed by Vijay Kanakamedala, “Bhairavam” is an inferior remake of the 2023’s “Garudan,” which was written and directed by R. S. Durai Senthilkumar. ” The plot is essentially the same for both movies, but “Bhairavam” is soulless and offers very little to care about the main characters. As is the case with many terrible action movies, “Bhairavam” (which translates to “fearsome” or “terrible” in English) tries to overcompensate for its monotnous story by having obnoxiously loud blaring of the movie’s score music and sound mixing.

“Bhairavam” (which takes place in an unnamed city in India) begins with an introduction explaining a Varahi Amman temple has been desecrated by various robberies. The trustee of the temple is Nagaratnamma (played by Jayasudha), who is the elderly matriarch of her family. Nagaratnamma expects that after she dies, the someone else in her family will take over the trusteeship of the temple.

Meanwhile, a circle inspector named Pardha Sarathi (played by Sampath Raj), who has 20 years of experience as police law enforcement, announces to his supervisor that he’s resigning from his job three months ahead of schedule. He says he wants to take this retirement early because he no longer feels proud to serve on the police force. Pardha says he blames one person for this disillusionment.

“Bhairavam” then does a flashback to three months earlier to show the events leading up t Pardha deciding to going to retirement earlier than he originally planned. The story focuses on three men who have been friends with each other since childhood. All three men experience various tests of their friendships and get entangled in power struggles over the temple after Nagaratnamma dies.

These are the three friends who are at the center of the story:

  • Gajapathi Varma (played by Manchu Manoj) is the affluent grandson of Nagaratnamma. He is the most ruthless and the most aggressive of the three friends. In the beginning of the story, Gajapathi and his wife Neelima (played by Anandhi) are childless and have been trying to have their first child.
  • Varadha (played by Nara Rohith) can be a good guy, but he flip-flops on his morality and loyalty to others, depending what will serve him best. He owns a successful company called Varadha Imports and is happily married to his devoted wife Poornima (played by Divya Pillai), who. Varadha and Poornima have two children: a son in his early teens and a daughter who’s about 5 or 6 years old.
  • Seenu (played by Sai Srinivas Bellamkonda) is the most ethical and compassionate of the three friends. Seenu was an orphan boy who met Gajapathi when Seenu saved Gajapathi’s life. A grateful Nagaratnamma then adopted Seenu, who is portrayed from the beginning as the obvious “hero” of the story.

As adults, Gajapathi (who is vengeful and has a nasty temper) does not treat Seenu as an equal member of his family. Seenu works in a low-level job for Gajapathi. Seenu has a working-class lifestyle, which is in contrast to the more upscale lifestyles of Gajapathi and Varadha. Seenu is a bachelor, but he invetiably gets a love interest. Her name is Vennela (played by Aditi Shankar), who is opinionated and flirtatious, but she’s not given much to do except go on dates with Gajapathi and dance with him in the movie’s musical numbers.

After the death of Nagaratnamma, there’s a power struggle over who will take ownership of the temple and its valuable surrounding property. A corrupt politician named Minister Vedurupalli Venkateshwara Rao (played by Sharath Lohitashwa) wants to take control. He enlists the help of his brother-in-law Nagaraju (played by Ajay), also known as Theatre, who is a somewhat bumbling criminal.

The brutal and vicious tones of the fight scenes are awkwardly mixed with some comedy that and light-hearted musical numbers that don’t fit well in the movie at all. A somewhat dorky police inspector named Sundarachari (played by Vennela Kishore) has a small role in the movie not because the Sundarachari is needed for the movie’s plot but because it looks like the filmmakers just wanted to put Kishore in the movie for some mindless comic relief.

The most impressive aspects of “Bhairavam” are the movie’s cinematography and production design, which make “Bhairavam” look very stylish. Too bad the story and acting don’t match. The movie’s visual effects are serviceable, but the over-the-top and unrealistic action sequences just mind-numbing and quite dull after a while.

Ultimately, the characters and performances in the very uneven “Bhairavam” just aren’t very appealing. Seenu is supposed to be “heroic” but he’s personality has no depth. And at 140 minutes, “Bhairavam” is entirely too long for a story that looks like a very uninspired rehash of any overblown action film about greed and revenge plots.

Prathyangira Cinemas released “Bhairavam” in select U.S. cinemas and in India on May 30, 2025.

Review: ‘Bhaje Vaayu Vegam,’ starring Kartikeya Gummakonda, Tanikella Bharani, Ravi Shankar, Rahul Tyson and Iswarya Menon

June 5, 2024

by Carla Hay

Kartikeya Gummakonda and Rahul Tyson in “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” (Photo courtesy of UV Creations)

“Bhaje Vaayu Vegam”

Directed by Prashanth Reddy

Telugu with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in India, the action film “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” features an all-Indian cast of characters representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: Two young adult brothers move to Hyderabad, where they have conflicts with two brothers from an older generation who are corrupt leaders.  

Culture Audience: “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” will appeal primarily to people who don’t mind watching bloated action movies that are weak imitations of other action films with the same themes.

Sharath Lohitashwa in “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” (Photo courtesy of UV Creations)

“Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” is just another long-winded and bombastic action film with the same over-used story themes of family revenge and violent murders. It’s a mostly forgettable tale of two pairs of brothers who are on a collision course of conflicts. This 136-minute bloated fiasco of a movie gets especially sloppy in the last third of the film, when it tries to cram in too many plot twists, most of which never look believable.

Written and directed by Prashanth Reddy, “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” is Reddy’s feature-film directorial debut. “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” could have been much better, but it just relies too heavily on storylines cobbled from many other similar actions films. The beginning of the movie, which takes place in India, shows a compassionate man named Rajaram (played by Tanikella Bharani) bringing home an orphan named Venkat, whose parents have been killed. Venkat is about 10 or 11 years old and one or two years younger than Raju, the biological son Rajaram and his wife Yashoda, who live in an unnamed village

Rajaram and Yashoda raise Venkat and Raju as brothers. Rajaram is fairly affluent and pays off the the debts that Venkat’s parents owed. At an early age, Venkat had a personality of beng rebellious and a bit of a troublemaker, while Raju was usually the responsible and obedient brother.

When Venkat (played by Kartikeya Gummakonda) and Raju (playe by Rahul Tyson) are adults, they move from their small village to Hyderabad to fulfill their dreams, thngs don’t go quite in the way that they expect. Venkat wants to become a professional cricket player, but he can’t afford the bribes needed to pay officials to be get n the fast track to be on India’s national cricket team. Venkat also has a gambling addiction. Raju gets fired from his computer technology job after assaulting a co-worker who accused Raju of lying about Raju’s qualifications.

Raju and Venkat both have a secret that they’ve been hiding from their father Rajaram: They sold the land they inherited from him, in order to pay off their debts. Raju and Venkat both plan to buy back the land when they can afford it.

Meanwhile, a story is told about another pair of brothers who also traveled from a small village to Hyderbad to make their dreams come true. George (played by Sharath Lohitashwa) and David (played by Ravi Shankar) both worked in a steel mill and were treated like outside. The two brothers got caught up in union politics at the steel mill.

George killed a union leader and ended up in prison, but he got out of prison by a corrupt politician who didn’t like the union leader. This corrupt politician became George’s mentor and eventually helped George become the mayor of Hyderabad. David has been living in George’s shadow and has become jealous and resentful.

The rest of “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” is a messy story about how Venkat, Raju, George and Davd cross paths and get into conflicts wth each other. There are the expected shootouts, chase scenes and bloody battles. There’s also a race against time when Rajaram needs an operation for pulmonary hypertension disease, and Venkat and Raju desperately scramble to get the money for the operation.

The acting performances range from mediocre to terrible. Iswarya Menon has a “token female” role as Venkat’s love interest in a relationship that goes nowhere. “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” has a story that’s ultimately time-wasting for people who’ve seen many of these types of movies already.

UV Creations released “Bhaje Vaayu Vegam” in select U.S. cinemas and in India on May 31, 2024.

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