


‘Daytime Revolution’ Review: In a Fascinating Footnote From the John Lennon-Yoko Ono Annals, Hipster Activists Reach the Middle American Masses
October 6, 2024


‘Blitz’ Review: Saoirse Ronan in Steve McQueen’s Admirably Crafted but Overly Clichéd Tribute to London’s Survival in World War II
October 10, 2024The ‘RRR’ star plays multiple roles in writer-director Koratala Siva’s bloody Tollywood epic, set in a remote coastal region populated by four warring clans.
Devara: Part 1
Formulaic wine in a new bottle.
Devara: Part 1 is ambitious, exhausting and so high-decibel that when it’s finished, after nearly three hours, you might need to pause and reorient to reality. Which is both a good thing and a bad thing.
The narrative transports us to a remote coastal region with four clans who participate in an annual combat, battling each other like gladiators. The winner’s village then keeps the altar of weapons until the next contest. The population wield torches and guns, but there are no schools or hospitals. This is a land of warriors, and the sea is so often drenched in blood that it has come to be known as Laal Samundar (red sea).
When it seems that his son, Vara (also played by Rama Rao Jr.), hasn’t inherited his skills in combat, other characters are quick to taunt him about his bloodline. It’s clear that a real man is one who can kill, lead, protect his family and drink copiously. At one point, a male character rides a shark like a horse. At another, two men fight each other until dawn. This is not a picture afraid of exaggeration.
The women have much less fun, as they are mostly submissive or suffering. Mothers and wives either wait while their men go to battle or weep when they come back dead. The heroine — Thangam, played by Janhvi Kapoor — spends most of what little screen time she has talking about marriage. Another female character, who is visually impaired, is so ashamed of being a burden on her brother that she attempts to kill herself. Yet another is murdered in a rage. In short, they are expendable. Even Devara’s mother, played by Zarina Wahab, doesn’t pack any emotional weight.
The film is formulaic wine in a new bottle — with the help of VFX, Siva creates an otherworldly environment. The sea plays a key role, and some of the action on it and in it is thrilling. But the characters and plot aren’t innovative enough. Like the KGF franchise and Salaar: Part 1 — Ceasefire, Devara: Part 1 is structured as a tale that one character is telling another, and Siva constantly uses a voiceover to connect the dots because there are just too many of them.
But in the second half, Siva seems to lose his grip. The story flatlines, especially with the arrival of village belle Thangam — while her arc is supposed to add a sprinkling of humor and romance, it only weighs down the narrative. Which, by now, is bursting with so many grunting, burly men baying for blood that even attentive viewers might have trouble keeping track of who is whose son, or who wants to kill whom.
Rama Rao Jr. and Siva’s first film together was the 2016 blockbuster Janatha Grage, in which the actor played an environmentalist who can kill as needed. He brings the same righteous rage to the two roles he plays here, and his conviction goes a long way toward making the most outrageous sequences palatable. He also dances with joy and skill. He’s well matched by Saif Ali Khan, who has become Hindi cinema’s most delicious bad man. As Bhaira, he channels his own Omkara performance and delivers. Even when he’s playing a villager, there is a sophistication to his evil.
But Devara: Part 1 nevertheless sags because none of the other characters have enough meat to them. Prakash Raj, as the village elder, is on autopilot, as are Murali Sharma, Abhimanyu Singh and Shine Tom Chacko. The narrative flatness is accentuated by the a synthetic-looking blue-gray visual palette. In too many scenes, it’s obvious where the set stops and the green screen begins. The movie ends with a predictable climactic twist. Hopefully Part 2 is where this story, like its leading man, actually soars.