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 Kingdom, Vijay Devarakonda Gives Another Dud

Rating: **

 The sole interesting factor is the actor. Vijay Deverakonda’s look  for his  infiltrator’s   character is  fascinating in its possibilities. He looks lean mean  forlorn and  unforgiving. He is  at once the perpetrator  and  the  victim. A wanderer  and a  messiah.

This is all on paper. And I wonder how hard  the actor worked on  looking the  part.That done, it must have felt like being all dressed  with nowhere to go.

For looks alone, Deverakonda gets full marks  in a film which is otherwise  as hollow as a  container of cola  without any fizz . Kingdom is not  only a  waste  of  Deverakonda’s  talent, but also a colossal  waste   of everyone’s time. Including the audience’s.

 What  is the purpose of its existence, besides making its  leading man look  messianic  in every frame? Deverakonda  plays a wound-up tense  police constable  who at the end  of this 2 hours  40 minutes of numbing nihility, is crowned  the king of a tribe which looks  like it could do  with  something  more than  waiting  to be  rescued.

Who are these people who have longed for a saviour for   centuries  waiting for the  divine descendent to stop faffing and  get to the  point? Quite like the  plot which can’t decide whether  it wants to be  Martin Scorsese’s The Departed  or Raj-DK’s The Family Man Season 2. Or maybe just a  bhai-bhai   drama  about two long-lost  brothers  who  grow up  in different countries.

A  mysterious government  man in a nylon suit , looking suspiciously  like  actor Manish Chaudhari, shows up at the hero Surya’s  doorstep offering ,in the pouring rain(why not  meet  inside, maybe the  hero’s mother is watching Kyunki..Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi, just like I should have) to send Surya to  get his long-lost brother back.

The next thing we  know, Surya is in a fancy prison doing a Shawshank Redemption with  burly  junior artistes throwing punches as  if they are going out of style.

This,  again, is  visually  impressive. But  doesn’t really help  us understand the plot. Why is Surya chosen to infiltrate  a   gang of smugglers in Sri Lanka when his  emotional involvement in the mission is  highly  aggravated?

Why is  Surya’s brother Shiva(Satyadev)’s  role so hazily etched? Is he in the wrong profession, or just plain indecisive(like the screenwriters)? Shiva   goes from one  fatally improper decision to another until we reach  a point when  all his tribesmen are either massacred  or  emaculated.

While the  villains massacre the entire trible,Devarakonda  whines and  moans in a  lady doctor’s lap. She is  Madhu(Bhagyashree Bose). No one has any idea what she is  doing in this  monochromed  and multi-crammed  mess. Maybe she walked  into the wrong location and they  decided to shoot with her a  bit  to make sure she  doesn’t feel bad.

 Apart  from the hero, every character in the plot is a blur. None more so than the villain Murugan(Venkitesh V. P)  who behaves  like he is imbibing intoxicating herbs grown  in  his background. How  can any actor  give such a deplorable performance alongside  a  leading man who knows his  job but doesn’t know where to apply his  skills.

 Writer-director   Gowtam Tinnanuri shoots the film in a visually suitable coastal  village. He then allows the  plot to go at sea. Only cinematographers Girish Gangadharan  and Jomon T. John seem to know  what they are doing. All the rest seem to have  been told they are part of  a film that would create history. My sympathies  for the believers.

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