Review of
Telugu/PAN India movie `PEDDI’
By S. Prabhakar
The much hyped and much-awaited Ram
Charan’s sports emotional drama has released worldwide today in Telugu, Hindi, Tamil,
Kannada & Malayalam. Peddi is a Ram
Charan movie all the way, having him in every frame, and he not only carried
the movie on his broad shoulders but delivered a brilliant performance.
Story writer and Director Buchi
Babu, in his second movie only, showed a lot of maturity and blended a very
emotional storyline of hardship faced by a daily wage workers from an unknown
village near Vizayanagaram, AP and their struggle to get an identity to their
village and a Railway station so that the labourers are not required to
walk/climb long distance for long hours to reach town with sports - hero
excelling in village Cricket, Wrestling and Para Athletes.
Normally, directors present the
hero or central characters as winners, but Buchi Babu has his own way of
showing his hero as a loser and driving emotions through their trials. In Peddi, despite his best efforts and
putting his heart into it, Peddi loses in Cricket and wrestling, and in the climax,
though Peddi wins the 400-meter dash for Para athletes, he refuses to accept
the medal. In his debut movie UPPENA,
the director has also gone for the story of a loser. But it
is doubtful if average moviegoers who expect a masala entertainer from Ram
Charan appreciate such a storyline. Buchi
Babu has also failed to maintain the same racy tempo throughout the movie, and
it is a roller coaster ride of some gripping scenes and then dropping and
dragging.
Performances: Ram Charan is the heart of the movie; he owns
every frame of the movie. There is depth in emotional scenes, and a lot of
physical transformation in each of the different sports: Cricket, Wrestling and Paralympic Athletics. One
could feel the amount of training he might have undergone for Wrestling bouts
and running race in climax. I am not
sure which technology was used, but he looked so natural and convincing in the running
race with one leg and another artificial limb.
He is excellent in action scenes
and dances, with Chikri Chikri becoming a range long ago. Peddi will be another landmark movie in his
career and can be put at par with Magadheera, Rangasthalam and RRR. I would
be surprised if he does not win some prestigious awards for his performance in
Peddi.
Apart from Ram Charan, seasoned Telugu
actor Jagapati Babu performed very well in a short but powerful and emotional central
character. Kannada veteran actor Shiv Rajkumar
was good as a wrestling coach. Most of the other large assembly of actors
from different languages are underutilised and wasted.
Jahnvi Kapoor had such an
insignificant role that in a 3-hour movie, she is there in 5 scenes (including
one song, which she messed up and looked out of place alongside Ram Charan and
Shruti Hassan). You knock off her role in
its entirety, it would not have made any difference to the movie.
Bomman Irani, Divyendu (of Mirjapur
fame), Ravi Kishan, Rao Ramesh, Bengali actor, Rajatava Dutta, all have very
small screen time to make any impact.
Story, Screenplay, & Direction: Buchi Babu has shown a lot of courage to pick up such a subject when he got to direct a top star like Ram Charan in only his second movie. He extracted the best out of Ram Charan and Jagapati Babu and fell short as far as other actors are concerned. The training routine of Ram Charan as Wrestler has been badly copied from the over 4 decades cult classic 36 Chambers of Shaolin; he should have gone for better training drills to make it more attractive. He should have avoided showing Peddi smoking while playing cricket and even while wrestling. At any level of sport, smoking is not permitted and such scenes looked silly in an otherwise intense movie. The screenplay could have been a bit tighter.
Action choreography: Sham
Kaushal and Maibam Nabakanta Meitei did a brilliant job and all action scenes,
especially wrestling bouts, have come off very well. It looks like they have given very good
training to Ram Charan in wrestling.
Music: After a long gap A R Rehman came up with 3 catchy
tunes and the background score too is good.
Choreography: Jani Master choreographed
some fast beat numbers, and RC did a great job, especially in Chikri Chkiri,
Rai Rai Rara and Hellallaloo.
Cinematography: R Rathnavelu did a splendid job in capturing
the lush green locales and also in action scenes.
Recommendation: It will be
a feast for Ram Charan Fans and a discerning audience who like emotional and
serious stuff. As far as Box office
performance is concerned, it should be a major hit of this year in Telugu, but I
doubt its reach to PAN India audience and joining 1000 cr club. It may lose steam at around 500-600 cr.
I give 4/5, 0.5 extra for Ramcharan's
brilliant performance.
S. Prabhakar
4.6.2026
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