Following the recent Oscar buzz, maybe we should rename this column Awfully Great
Director: S. S. Rajamouli
Stars: N. T. Rama Rao Jr., Ram Charan, Ray Stevenson
In 1920s India, a young girl is kidnapped by an evil British governor, causing her village to send their unstoppable “protector” to get her back at any cost. The ensuing trail of vengeance and destruction catches the attention of an equally relentless police officer and leads to a showdown that may change the fate of the country forever.
The greatest superhero movie of 2022 wasn’t released by Marvel or DC. Not one of them came close to touching the glory that is RRR. India’s breakout international hit—the most expensive movie ever made in the country—brought in audiences from all over the world and set records at the box office with its huge spectacle and mass appeal.
I was weary of the hype, but it’s honestly the most crowd-pleasing, four-quadrant movie I’ve seen in a long time, featuring literally everything you could possibly want in a film: stellar action sequences, real character drama, romance AND bromance, and even multiple musical numbers/dance-offs. And RRR delivers it all with such gusto, not afraid to go big and silly, or serious and sincere when needed. It’s a movie where you’ll cheer watching someone throw a snarling leopard at a bad guy in the middle of a fight, and then immediately get misty-eyed as the same man sings an inspirational song about human perseverance.
It’s not a bad movie in the typical tradition of this column, but the sheer excess and over-the-top ridiculousness is all the excuse I need to recommend it for Awfully Good fans.
Bonus! You might actually learn something about the history of India…sort of. The story of RRR is based on real revolutionaries Komaram Bheem and Alluri Sitarama Raju, both of whom led rebellions against British colonizers in the 1920s and 1930s. The characters here are fictitious versions of the actual men, who never met in real life and thus sadly never actually waged a two-man war on invading oppressors using jungle cats. Writer/Director S. S. Rajamouli instead posits the film as a three-hour “what if” that imagines these folk heroes on their own paths of resistance, before coming together to rescue a kidnapped girl and jumpstarting an uprising in the process.
In doing so, it treats the two historical figures like real-life superheroes with inexplicable strength and abilities. (One of the characters even receives his famous outfit/supersuit just in time for the final fight like a traditional origin story.) This all leads to some amazing, often brutal action scenes featuring kung fu fights, gun fights, big stunt pieces, and exciting chases—both motorcycle and horse—all on a massive scale. It’s not a movie to invite realism or nitpicking, sort of in the vein of the later Fast and Furious movies…but with an actual story and characters.
It’s also all gorgeously shot and competently edited, so much so that I would kill to see what Rajamouli could do with a big Hollywood blockbuster. Even being the most expensive Telugu-language film from South India, RRR only cost $72 million. Can you imagine what this director could do with $200 million?
I know this is bad form for a writer on the Internet, but if you have any interest in this movie at all, I implore you to stop reading this article immediately and just experience RRR for yourself. It features some of the craziest stuff you’ll see on celluloid all year and it’s best discovered cold. However, if you need a little more enticing, here are some of my favorite parts:
All the action has a turn-off-your-brain mentality to it, but the rest of RRR definitely does not. Shockingly, the dramatic, character-building moments in this really work. Scenes like Bheem’s Braveheart-style torture and Raju’s tragic backstory with his dad are actually quite powerful, something I was not expecting in a movie like this. There are technically female romantic leads for each of the main characters, but the genuine and complicated friendship the two men share is the real relationship at the heart of the movie. Or as their theme song repeatedly says, it’s a “Friendship between an erupting volcano and a wild storm!”
I also enjoyed how unflinchingly hard it goes against the British. The evil governor and his equally villainous wife, played by Punisher: War Zone’s Ray Stevenson and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade’s Allison Doody, make convincingly over-the-top bad guys with zero shades of grey or subtlety. (SPOILER: When they eventually kill the governor, his fresh heartblood splatters across a sign of the crown that reads, “The sun never sets on the English Empire.”) There’s just something heartwarming about India’s biggest international hit being a scathing takedown of its colonial oppressors.
Like most Bollywood (or in this case, Tollywood) movies, RRR is long—just over three hours—but trust me when I say it flies by. There’s not a wasted minute, even with some of the song and dance numbers, which is more than I can say with most Hollywood blockbusters these days. It’s currently on Netflix in the U.S., but If you ever have a chance to see it on the big screen, I highly recommend treating your eyeballs and your heart to a memorable time.
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