Hanu Man Is Fun All The Way

Hanu Man
Hanu Man

 Hanu Man

Starring  Teja Sajja ,Amritha Aiyer, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar

Directed  by  Prasanth Varma

Rating: ***

Is it a bird, is  it a plane? No, it is Hanu Man!  Mischievously   plucking out  a portion of our mythology , Hanu Man pitches an innocent sweetfaced  Teja Sajja against a  red-hot evil ‘mega-man’  (Vinay Rai).

The  fight between  Good  and Evil is designed  in the form of a digitalized  epic.Does the gambit play off?  It does. The crackerjack  screenplay converts the dead-serious earnestness  of the  Marvel kingdom  into  fun-filled good fest.

 Although the  film’s budgetis  meagre(20 crores) it looks much larger,and far more playful  than the  Western super-hero films.

Hanu Man is  a cheeky film , relying on the  young hero’s goofy antics  more  than  his  powers  to save  the world.Save the world is so unrealistic. How  about save the village from extraneous marauders? Or save the  sister  from getting married because she is to the hero what Ashwini Bhave was to Salman Khan in Bandhan. A sibling who won’t let go even when she gets married.

 Not surprisingly  there is more, much more bonding between the hero  and his screen sister, played by the formidable  Vara Laxmi Sarathkumar  than the  nondescript  love interest.

 I have  so far desisted  from  naming the  hero. I  wanted to give  a proper  late introduction in my  review.

Meet Teja Sajja  as  Hanumanth, the Hanuman avatar in Kurtas, Pyjamas and Kolhapuri chappals. He defines the  common man’s hero  slot which most of our big heroes refuse to consider  as their home.

One reason why super-hero films don’t work in Indian cinema(unless  you think Krissh  works) is the vanity of our  A-list heroes who  feel they are a super-hero even  when they are not playing one.

Teja Sajja drops his vanity. He is  Everyman, and therefore no man. He is  a playful Krishna  who wants to be a  playful Hanuman. His super-powers take him by surprise. The reason we  like  him so much is his complete  surrender  to the mood of  goofiness.He doesn’t take  himself seriously.  But he takes his  job as  the God-sanctioned cleaner very seriously.

 The  mood is zany. The  kicks and grunts are  constantly a teasing reminder  of  how much fun mythology can be without  meaning any disrespect. Comparisons in this case are not odious and what they did to the Ramayan in Adipurush  including Hanuman was  incendiary enough to burn all of Lanka  all over again.

This  Hanuman has a tale. He tells it with  a zest  for  adventure  which is infectious  and dopey. Hanu Man may not qualify for  an Oscar. But who needs one  anyway?

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