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EDITOR'S PICK
Jagapathi Babu-starer Chattam does not have any fresh element in the
story. Director Arun Prasad has combined three incidents that took place in
Warrangal, Vijayawada and the 26/11 terrorist attack on Mumbai. In the film,
reference to these incidents become so apparent that the character`s names and
body language resemble real life characters a lot.
For example, you have Hasab, who resembles Ajmal Amir Kasab, the Pakistani
terrorist convicted for the 26/11 attack. The film`s hero is a cop and just
wants to eliminate Hasab and the background behind his decision forms the basic
plot of the story.
Arun Prasad, known for directing action-oriented films, follows the same type of
narration that was seen in his previous movies. He has not shown any novelty
while narrating this one.
The action pattern fits the standards and trends seen in low-budget Telugu
moives. Even the production is ordinary. The technical aspects have nothing
extraordinary to write home about and the climax is the weakest part of the
script.
Jagapathy Babu plays a corrupt cop, Gowrishankar, who does not bother to solve
cases given to him. But a rape and an acid throwing incident shock him. The
perpetrators of the crime get killed, but police investigations reveal it is
Gowrishankar who is involved in the cases.
Gowrishankar reaches Mumbai to kill Hasab, but gets involved in a fight with the
underworld and is arrested. Later he is sent to the same jail where Hasab is
kept. Whether he succeeds in his endeavour forms the rest of the story.
Jagapathi Babu shows energy in the role of Gowrishankar, but he is clearly
handicapped by the weak script. Vimala Raman as an aerobics instructor doesn`t
have much to do. Ashish Vidyarthi and Jeeva are just passable.
Arun Prasad might have had good intentions while making the film, but Chattam
is certainly an average offering because he has made a mess of his script.