The clown apparent of Telugu cinema has hit the screens again - and you can say that again. For, Khatarnak is a Ravi Teja film with the now assembly-line precision of a Ravi Teja film - it's Ravi Teja reprising Ravi Teja. If you are clear what you are going for, you're unlikely to be disappointed. If you're not, well, you will be from the next time.
So Khatarnak has 'em all - a comic first half, a vicious villian with bayonet and machete-wielding henchmen, some bloody fights, some mass numbers (including a song with the lyrics "Doma kudithe chikun gunya / Prema kudithe sukham gunya" that makes you want to kill yourself brutally), and a general take-home value of zero. It won't change the way you live your life - assuming, that is, that that song doesn't have any lasting effects on you - but it keeps you more entertained than whatever else you might have been doing in the time you chose to watch this.
So Das (Ravi Teja) is a small-time crook who is hijacked by an underworld don (Lal) to infiltrate the police force and pass on key information to him, since he has the required guile, and a spotless police record. There is a small hitch, though - getting into the police force requires "10th pass". And so, their first problem is getting Das to pass the SSC exams.
That has never been a long-term goal of Das' life, and it takes all the persuasion that a gang of goons can conceptualize to make him join school and start to study. That includes blackmailing him that they'll embroil him in a murder case, beating him up, and putting him in front of an oncoming train without informing the railway department first. Nothing works, though - Das still requires four options for the correct answer to 2 + 2, and then 3 lifelines.
The chink in his armor, however, is his huge crush on Nakshatra (Ileana), a teacher in the school who wears spaghetti tops and backless blouses to teach school students. So the villians blackmail her into acting like she loves him (though she actually despises him), but she just insults him, which has the desired effect anyway - he studies and passes.
He becomes a cop, and Nakshatra does fall in love with him, but in the course of his spywork for the don, her brother gets killed and the blame is on him, and she hates him all over again. He now turns against his bosses, and a huge battle starts.
The first half of Khatarnak looks inspired by
Main Hoon Naa, but it has some pretty entertaining moments - though things might've been better if it were set in college like in the original instead of in school. It might not have worked with the script, but the film has plenty of chinks anyway.
For example, just how did Das set the goons on fire in school when
he is the guy doused in petrol? Why does Nakshatra insult him right after looking very impressed after this scene? And the climax fight is as unrealistic as any in these superhero movies.
Watching Ravi Teja act is like watching Shammi Kapoor imitate himself - where his already boisterous act will become even more so because of the exaggeration in the mannerisms that any mimic does. The most hyperactive of Telugu heroes, Ravi Teja certainly ensures there's no dull moment when he's around, mostly by being a joker - his feminine hip-swaying swagger, his superfast and animated dialogue-delivery, and his rapidfire ripostes bring an energy to the screen that persuades you against asking yourself any fundamental questions.
Ileana is purely glamour - this being her first film after
Pokiri, she might attract some masses, but then there's a lot more of her coming up this month and the next. The beauty that well-written heroine roles bring to a film is completely absent here - she is just a
bachao babe in a standard Telugu mass movie.
There are a couple of hummable songs, especially Aa Gaganamlo. The comic track is led by Ravi Teja himself, and is the primary source of entertainment.
Someone should tell our cameramen that those concave effects to horizontally stretch images really, really suck. It's havoc on our eyes - they seem to do it just because it's perhaps tough and expensive, or because all the others are doing it, without any idea of whether people like it.
On the whole, this one is tolerable if you cannot find anything else to do. Certainly not worth Rs. 100 in a multiplex, however, unless you desperately need to get rid of some black money.