He extracts the strong performance not only from Balakrishna but also from the supporting roles like LB Sriram, Prabhakar and Murali Mohan. The director handles this hour competently with some feel-good moments in the territory that seems quite familiar to us. The best part is the actor’s discourse about the priests and the slokas highlighting the essential practices they do in pursuance of a faith. The first hour of Jai Simha is entertaining with Balakrishna in his elements. Who is Narasimha and why is he on the run is the essence of Jai Simha. Meanwhile, he gets framed for the murder of the town’s dreaded gangster Kaniyappan’s (Kalakeya Prabhakar) brother. During the course, Narasimha learns that his childhood sweetheart Gowri (Nayanthara), who hates him due to some reason lives there. He lands in Kumbakonam, earns a living as a driver to the village temple’s trustee - played by Murali Mohan. The film introduces Balakrishna as Narasimha, who has a dubious past and leads a nomadic life with his one-year-old son. This time too, his actioner Jai Simha directed by KS Ravi Kumar presents him in a role that suits him the best and how his fans would like to see him. Time and again, the 57-year-old actor proved that the festive season works for him and his fans. And if his film is slotted for Sankranti, it creates tremendous fanfare. He can lift a police van with one hand, make a mockery of Archimedes by getting a bed, with the villain on it, to turn 90 degrees vertically, and smash his way through from inside a goods-container with his SUV.Balakrishna is, without doubt, the darling of the masses. They unwittingly try to take revenge, but little do they know the power of a Telugu movie hero. But, since it is time-consuming to actually create feasible back-stories, the screenplay uses a simple placeholder – younger brothers of villains, who end up dead.Ī don in Kumbakonam and another with powerful political aspirations have both lost their dear younger brothers thanks to that darling of the masses, Narasimha. Narasimha (Nandamuri Balakrishna), in his urge to help people, ends up stoking hostilities with some nasty, bloodthirsty people. K S Ravikumar’s Jai Simha is the jarring tale of a bunch of people who can’t get enough of screaming and fighting with each other, with one man trying to be the destroyer of evil and protector of the innocent.
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