Billa (Prabhas) is a devious, scheming, cold-hearted criminal. His English is even worse. And when "Trust no one, kill anyone," gets too complex for him, he switches to "Can can."
Living in Malaysia, he is wanted in a dozen countries. Krishnamurthy (Krishnam Raju) is an ACP leading a troop of Armani-clad policemen after him, but at whose heels the Interpol is snapping for not being able to nab Billa. However, Krishnamurthy is a committed officer who puts in his 100% into his job. This explains why Billa escapes everytime the ACP has him surrounded - if he'd thought of putting in 200%, Billa would have escaped twice as many times as the ACP actually surrounds him.
Bursting the hip factor in through the door is Maya (Anushka), a girl wronged in Billa's hands, and who has now sworn revenge. Billa's girlfriend, Lisa (Namita), has never had a problem catching his attention until Maya's arrival. Now she starts uncovering more of her midriff, which puts it in the 0.00000023% of her body that already isn't.
During a chase, Billa and the ACP confront each other - which leads to Billa being packed off in a body bag. With the help of a local restaurant owner (Ali), the ACP brings in Billa's lookalike, the petty kind-hearted thief Ranga (Prabhas), all the way from Vizag. After getting trained, Ranga is now ready to become Billa. The rest of the story is a series of twists and turns that lead to the final two questions - who designed the clothes on these people, and can we get some, too?
Billa is, more than anything else, a packaging triumph. With blacks and whites, urban Malaysian landscapes, never-ending hangars, Ferraris, choppers, and well-dressed and important-looking men and women strutting between frames, all over it, you can be forgiven for wondering where the script is going. And the makers are forgiven for not bothering to wonder where the script is going.
The first half sassily shoves the gloss into your face - Prabhas swashbuckles, the women parade their stuff, and car chases and shoot-outs are all over the place. The second half goes on for way too long. If there still is anyone out there who hasn't watched
the remake of that iconic film, we recommend watching the film
your way - one with no lasting memory of the remake or of the original.
Performance-wise, Billa has only Anushka to speak of in the entire film, and we can't get enough of her razzle-dazzle. Though not much of a character (like everyone else's in the film), Maya is the only one that instantly connects to you. Prabhas is wooden but blazes the screen all the same. Krishnam Raju acts like Prabhas' uncle for sure - more wooden. Namita is, er, too healthy to be wearing the clothes she is (or isn't), and her dialogue delivery and acting are only secondary issues.
With thumping music and a techno-touch to his songs, Manisharma doesn't miss a beat, and
Bommali must be the catchiest of all the tunes.
If you're in the mood to watch a hot babe and a hot hunk race around to some smoking music, watch this one - it won't play havoc with your brains.