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Vishnu’s Warrior Avatar Dilutes a Touching Devotional Saga

Players: Vishnu Manchu, Akshay Kumar, Prabhas, Mohanlal, Mohan Babu, Sarath Kumar, Preity

Director: Mukesh Kumar Singh

Actor producer Vishnu Manchu plays the role of a rebellious tribal warrior in this mito-fantasy epic for ancient times. As a archery master and a loyal atheist, Vishnu undergoes a physical transformation for the role and gains a muscular appearance that will fit the wild intensity of his character. However, the attempt to include a tribal warrior story deeply with a deep narrative dedicated to the film slightly eroding the emotional core of the film.

There is no doubt that Kannappa has the most ambitious players of Vishnu – Power centers such as Akshay Kumar, Mohanlal, Mohan Babu, and Lord Shiva’s divine ambassador Rudra, which shines as Rudra. Prabhas stops long with an honorable, restricted performance, spreads Gravitas and mystical attraction.

The director’s Casual Gambling Singh manages to tighten the grip in the second half, which focuses more on Kannappa’s spiritual journey. However, the first half is curled with tribal conflicts, human sacrifice and expanded war series, and the intended devotion dilutes the mood. A funny deviation of childhood flashbacks and Brahmanandam feels unnecessary and inflates the time of working.

Vishnu Manchu describes the transformation of an atheist into a religious follower of Lord Shiva with a religious follower, but emotional change often feels more mechanical than organic. Although their intentions have invested in a great investment in both the story and the production, the insistence of raising the heroic image of Kannappa leaves the essence of the spiritual publication a little. Ultimately, the divine love-nefret dynamics between the core of the film-Lord Shiva and the hot island is disappeared in many sub-plan and greater action than life.

The film begins with a celestial speech between Lord Shiva (Akshay Kumar, a limited but effective role) and the goddess Parvathi (Kajal Aggarwal) and foresees the rise of a loyal soul on earth. Below is a terrible tribal environment in which a child is sacrificed to appease the goddess Kali. A young Kannappa, which is horrified by this action, begins to question the existence of God. His love for a religious tribal daughter (Preity) forms the basis of emotional and spiritual awakening.

Akshay Kumar, who plays Lord Shiva for a long time in Omg 2, appears here in a more restricted cameo, but leaves his trail. Kajal aggarwal is used as a parvathi inadequate. Mohan Babu has strong moments as if the Reverend is dedicated to Vayulingam from Kalahasti, and Mohanlal plays a very short role.

Vishnu designed Kannappa as an epic of Pan-India, and went out with a multilingual player full of stars and a large budget. His intention – to tell the legendary story of the temple of Kalahasti to a global audience – is worth praising. However, a more contained, Telugu -based film may have served the story better and offers more space for emotional depth, while at the same time alleviating budget prints.

While trying to organize a large -scale demonstration, Kannappa loses the sincere, prickly connection that defines the timeless dedication tales.

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