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Kantara movie review: Rishab Shetty's mesmeric blend of action and mythology ranks among the best of Indian cinema

Kantara movie review: rishab shetty brings an original tale rooted in indian culture and mythology that surely ranks among the best efforts by an indian filmmaker in recent times..

By the time of the writing of this review, Kantara has earned endorsements from people far more accomplished in the world of cinema, with many more National Awards than this writer can ever hope to win. So I’ll admit I went into the theatre with a preconceived notion about the film, hoping for something good. But Kantara still blew me away. The beautiful amalgamation of action, thrill, faith, and mythology in this powerful film ranks among the best efforts by any Indian filmmaker in recent times. Also read: Kantara becomes highest-rated Indian film on IMDb, Dhanush calls it 'a must-watch'

Kantara by Rishab Shetty is a beautiful concoction of thrill, action and mythology.

A lot has been said about how Indian cinema is losing touch with its roots and not finding original stories from the heartland. This land, being so diverse and vast, is a treasure trove of stories. Kantara shows just what is possible when a good storyteller decides to tell an original tale rooted in the land and its culture, while bringing with himself the expertise and technical finesse of good filmmaking. At the heart of it, Kantara is the age-old story of man vs nature, of villagers vs zamindars, and the thirst for land and money. But it is so much more as it weaves elements from coastal Karnataka’s culture and mythology in the story so seamlessly and fluidly.

The story is set around a village in south Karnataka where a king had given that land to the villagers 150 years ago. In 1990, when the story is set, an upright forest officer (played by a brilliant Kishore) is trying to curb tree felling and hunting in that land, which is now a reserve forest. To complicate matters, the villagers believe that the land was given to them as a boon from their Daiva--the demigod protector of the forest, and are hence in no mood to listen to this outsider. Leading the charge against this is the village strongman Shiva (Rishab Shetty), and he is supported by the king’s descendant, the village’s sahib (Achyuth Kumar).

It is hard to pinpoint the one thing that makes Kantara tick. Let’s start with the script. It takes a story seen very often in our daily lives and introduces some unique local flavour, rooting it to Indian culture, making it stand out from among other such tales. Then comes the real cherry on top of this beautiful cake- the breathtakingly beautiful cinematography of Arvind Kashyap. The way Arvind’s lens has brought alive the folklore of Kantara is a lesson for storytellers. Some of the scenes of the buffalo racing in the beginning of the film deserve special praise, as do all the scenes from the festivities and visuals of the Daiva.

The background score and music from Ajaneesh Loknath complements the camera work totally. The choice to use western instruments in some scenes depicting Indian festivities was a bold one and it pays off quite well. The score brings out the myths, culture, and feel of the land where Kantara is set, taking you into the heart of the story so easily that you forget you are sitting in a movie theatre in another part of the country.

Rishab Shetty as Shiva delivers a powerful performance as this unstoppable force, who will go to any lengths to protect his village and his people. His beautifully-choreographed and slick action sequences would be at home even in the best of Hollywood films. Kishore is on the other spectrum as the calm, simmering forest officer Muralidhar, at loggerheads with Shiva. The actor brings so much intensity into his scenes that it’s a treat to watch.

This review would be incomplete without the mention of how colourfully and glamorously the film portrays the local festivities and rituals. The colours are vivid, the sounds melodic, and the portrayal powerful. All the scenes involving the Daiva are compelling, and some even hair-raising. That guttural scream from the Daiva gives you goosebumps on more than one occasion. Without spoiling anything, I can just say that the climax, while being a completely masala Indian film offering, elevates the film to another level.

Like Sohum Shah’s Tumbbad some four years ago, Kantara is proof that the earthy, rooted folk tales from India have the power to be turned into compelling cinema. Kantara, in fact, takes Tumbbad’s legacy even forward. Despite being appreciated by everyone who watched it. Tumbbad made only ₹ 13 crore at the box office. Kantara, meanwhile, is hurtling towards the 100-crore mark. It is an important film because it’s success will determine if other filmmakers across India will dare to tell original stories.

Director: Rishab Shetty

Cast: Rishab Shetty, Kishore, Achyuth Kumar, Sapthami Gowda, Pramod Shetty, and Manasi Sudhir.

author-default-90x90

Abhimanyu Mathur is an entertainment journalist with Hindustan Times. He writes about cinema, TV, and OTT, churning out interviews, reviews, and good old news stories. ...view detail

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Kantara Movie Review (2022)

Rishab shetty's 'kantara' is a solid masala-myth that, despite its issues, finds new ways to tell an old story about ‘the chosen one’.

Kantara Movie Review in English

Kantara Movie Cast & Crew

Rishab Shetty writes, directs, and delivers a joyous and very exuberant performance as Shiva, the protagonist of Kantara – but he's absent from the opening stretch that is set in the nineteenth century. We hear a tale about a king who had everything. He had the love of his family. He had the love of his subjects. What he did not have was peace of mind. There's a second time period, in the mid-1970s, and a third, in 1990. The screenplay uses many devices to tie the past and the present – or rather, to bring the past to the present and show how the two are always intertwined. There's the sound of anklets heard in a forest. There's a near-mythical sword passed on from the days of the king to the days we find Shiva in. There's the reference to Vishnu's third incarnation, Varaha Avatar, where the god became a boar.

And the most important past-present connection is a fearsome scream, which is also a metaphor for the cry of anguish of the landless. We hear this cry in the present-day Bhoota Kola performances, and we get into the meat of the plot: Who "owns" the forests? Or to extend this point, who owns Nature? The tribals who have lived in these lands for centuries? The government, which draws boundaries and creates forest reserves and wants to relocate these tribals? Or the local landlords, who still think that their ancestors gave away these lands, and so these lands are – in a sense – still theirs? Attached to this supertext is the subtext of whether we can really reject our identity. This question is posed through Shiva, who hails from a family of Bhoota Kola performers, but refuses to have anything to do with the folk-art form. It has something to do with his nightmares, which he must learn to face.

Meanwhile, he is content getting a "mass" entry as a Kambala champion, a man who wins buffalo races. Kantara follows the classic template of The Chosen One, a man who appears ordinary but is destined for greatness. At first, Shiva is as ordinary as ordinary can be. He drinks. He hunts. He pinches a girl's hip and peeps when she's bathing. He's called a "fighter cock", and he is constantly cursed by his mother. And like every self-respecting masala -movie hero, he locks horns with the antagonist, the man who will not allow him to do the things he likes to do. This man is the forest officer Murali, nicely played with gruff authority by Kishore. He represents the System, the government, and at least in one respect, he's the opposite of Shiva: this man does things by the rulebook. The third vertex in this male-triangle movie is the landlord played by Achyuth Kumar. He always wears white, and his heart appears equally spotless, equally pure.

But note his name: Devendra. It's a lordly name. It refers to the Vedic god, Indra – as opposed to the more pagan god we see being worshipped by the tribals. There’s a bit of discrimination right there. In short, we are either in a masala movie disguised as folklore, or in folklore disguised as a masala movie. Either way, everything has a touch of symbolism. When Murali interferes with a Bhoota Kola performance, it's also the government interfering in the centuries-old life and customs of tribals. When a tree falls on a Jeep, it almost seems like the forest is avenging itself on behalf of its people. And when the king's sword returns in the story, we recall a promise being made and what would happen when it is broken. All of this is richly shot by Arvind S Kashyap, and elevated by B Ajaneesh Loknath's score, which is simultaneously as big as rock music and as subtle as the gently rippling notes at the film's opening. And some of the action choreography is superb.

There are issues in the writing. The portions of Leela (Sapthami Gowda) falling for Shiva should have been better. There's a taken-for-granted quality about this love story. And though Kantara is not exactly a whodunit, the villains are easy enough to spot from a mile away, and a character's change of heart is entirely expected – meaning, the narrative could have used a lot more tension. And in such a story, I wish they'd avoided the cliches – like Shiva bursting in fury when his mother is slapped around, or the really cheap shot of a little girl being killed. But the bigger picture of Kantara is in the smaller details. It’s in the way Leela is torn between her affiliation to her job, i.e. the government, and her people, i.e. the tribals. It's in the way Nature is manifested as wild animals, as forests, as fire, as rain. When Shiva is drenched in a downpour, he says he isn't wet; he has been cleansed. It’s almost like Nature has performed a ritual on him. Despite the generic nature of the middle portions, the closing stretch complements the film’s opening beautifully. And there’s very little more potent than the rush of myth.

About Author

Baradwaj Rangan

Baradwaj Rangan

National Award-winning film critic Baradwaj Rangan, former deputy editor of The Hindu and senior editor of Film Companion, has carved a niche for himself over the years as a powerful voice in cinema, especially the Tamil film industry, with his reviews of films. While he was pursuing his chemical engineering degree, he was fascinated with the writing and analysis of world cinema by American critics. Baradwaj completed his Master’s degree in Advertising and Public Relations through scholarship. His first review was for the Hindi film Dum, published on January 30, 2003, in the Madras Plus supplement of The Economic Times. He then started critiquing Tamil films in 2014 and did a review on the film Subramaniapuram, while also debuting as a writer in the unreleased rom-com Kadhal 2 Kalyanam. Furthermore, Baradwaj has authored two books - Conversations with Mani Ratnam, 2012, and A Journey Through Indian Cinema, 2014. In 2017, he joined Film Companion South and continued to show his prowess in critiquing for the next five years garnering a wide viewership and a fan following of his own before announcing to be a part of Galatta Media in March 2022.

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kannada movie review in tamil

  • Home » Movies » Photo Kannada Movie Review

Photo review: Arguably one of the best pandemic-based narratives in Indian cinema

At its core, 'Photo' is a sweet tale of the bond between a father and son, which makes the viewers reflect on the ground reality versus privilege.

Bhaskar Basava

Published:Mar 13, 2024

kannada movie review in tamil

A poster of the film 'Photo'. (X)

kannada movie review in tamil

Photo (Kannada)

  • Main Cast: Mahadev Hadapad, Veeresh Gonwar, Sandhya Arakere, and Jahangeer
  • Director: Utsav Gonwar
  • Producer: Utsav Gonwar
  • Cinematography: Dinesh Divakaran

Photo as a film is not new to the festival-watching film aficionados in India.

The poignant tale is set against the backdrop of the migrant evacuation problem during the pandemic when the lockdowns were announced.

Though, at its core, it is a sweet tale of the bond between a father and son, the movie makes the viewers reflect on the ground reality versus privilege.

At a time when one part of the world sat around contemplating whether or not to make dalgona coffee at home, migrants like the family shown in the film faced a different kind of life during the lockdown.

Also Read: Tamil dubbed version of ‘Premalu’ to release on 15 March

Photo is directed by Utsav Gonwar

‘Photo’ is directed by Utsav Gonwar. (X)

The premise is simple. Durgya, a youngster from a village in Raichur, has a simple dream. He aspires to get a photograph of him against the backdrop of Vidhana Soudha, much like some of the cooler people in his village.

His father lives in Bengaluru working as a daily wage construction worker.

His mother sends Durgya to his father in Bengaluru to fulfil his dream. But the sudden lockdown sees Durgya being ferried back home.

This is when the film shifts gear to showcasing the plight that many migrants saw when they partook in long journeys back home walking multiple hundreds of kilometres.

We have seen many narratives that spoke about varied stories dealing with people during the pandemic in cities and towns. But Photo is one of those few films that hold a mirror to one of the darkest truths of the pandemic in India.

It is moving and poignant, and makes you uncomfortable and emotional.

But such tales are required to ensure more people understand what else happened in the country.

Lal Salaam failure: Aishwarya Rajinikanth reveals that footage of 21 days was lost

A grim reminder.

Photo is based on the pandemic-induced lockdown

‘Photo’ is based on the pandemic-induced lockdown. (X)

Often, keyboard activists take to causes that die the moment a hashtag loses relevance. But a film like Photo , which can be called arguably one of the pandemic-based narratives in Indian cinema, will remain for posterity as an uncomfortable and grim reminder of a part of history that people should address, acknowledge and most importantly seek to rectify for it to never repeat again.

Debutant filmmaker Utsav Gonwar has to be acknowledged not only for his soulful storytelling but also for his craft. The visual treatment and the story end up moving even the most rigid minds to melt.

When people choose to share stories of heartland India, they often look at quirky tales with comedy being a big essence.

While those are important, movies like Photo serve a bigger purpose as they will ensure more conversations are had about issues that need more relevance under the sun.

The film has some endearing performances by all its cast members. The one leading the pack is young Veeresh Gonwar who seems to have lived his character and shines bright.

Mahadev Hadapad and Sandhya Arakere as the parents are equally brilliant.

Photo is a film that is far removed from the usual commercial masala fare. But it has something that can stir emotions in everyone.

There are some films that need to be watched only to ensure a better tomorrow and this is one such.

(Views expressed here are personal.)

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  • film review
  • kannada cinema
  • Movie review

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  19. Kannada Movie Reviews

    Get all the latest Kannada movie reviews. Read what the movie critics say, give your own rating and write your take on the story, music and cast of your favourite Kannada movie. ... Tamil Movies ...

  20. Joe (2023)

    Joe: Directed by Hariharan Ram. With Rio Raj, Malavika Manoj, Bhavya Trikha, Anbu Thasan. The emotional journey of a young man navigating the depths of love, heartbreak and hope.

  21. 'Photo' Kannada movie review

    Music Director: Rai Hiremath. Cinematography: Dinesh Divakaran. Rating. 4.5 /5. Photo as a film is not new to the festival-watching film aficionados in India. The poignant tale is set against the backdrop of the migrant evacuation problem during the pandemic when the lockdowns were announced. Though, at its core, it is a sweet tale of the bond ...

  22. Mufti (film)

    Mufti (transl. Undercover) is a 2017 Indian Kannada-language neo-noir action thriller film directed by Narthan, making his debut, and produced by Jayanna Combines. The film stars Shiva Rajkumar, Sriimurali, and Shanvi Srivastava in the lead roles, while Devaraj, Chaya Singh, Madhu Guruswamy, Vasishta N. Simha, and Babu Hirannaiah play supporting roles.

  23. Oru Nodi Movie Review

    The movie also features Vela Ramamurthy, Sri Ranjani, Gajaraj, Pazha Karuppaiah, and Karupu Nambiar in key roles. Needless to say, Oru Nodi is one of the most anticipated releases of the year.

  24. Lover (2024)

    Lover: Directed by Prabhu Ram Vyas. With Harini Sundararajan, Sri Gouri Priya, Manikandan K., Geetha Kailasam. Arun and Divya's six-year relationship starts unraveling as they drift apart, raising the question of whether love can withstand such differences.

  25. Ilaiyaraaja sends a copyright notice to Rajinikanth's 'Coolie' team

    Entertainment News Bollywood News Tollywood News Kollywood News Mollywood News Movie Reviews Latest Hindi ... Tamil Movies 2024 Telugu Movies 2024 Malayalam Movies 2024 Kannada Movies 2024 Marathi ...

  26. In Frames

    Kannada film stars, businessmen and cricketers come out in large numbers to cast their votes in Phase 2 of Lok Sabha elections April 26, 2024 03:19 pm | Updated April 27, 2024 10:07 am IST The ...