Keshava Movie Review and Analysis

✅ Fact Checked

Keshava is a crime thriller film starring Nikhil Siddharth and Ritu Varma in lead roles. Abhishek Nama produced the film under Abhishek productions. Sudheer Varma has written and directed the film. Keshava was released worldwide on 19 May 2017.

Keshava movie review

Keshava Story Inspirations

The writer and director of the film, Sudheer Varma, himself told that several Hollywood films inspired the movie. It is difficult to relate the film to any other film as there are tons of revenge thrillers in Tollywood as well as other industries. The concept of dextrocardia is impressive and the audience well received it.

Keshava Story

Keshava (Nikhil Siddharth) is a patient of dextrocardia. His heart is on the right side of the chest which prevents him from getting tensed or excited. His parents were killed and his sister was paralyzed in an accident when he was a kid. After 12 years, he tracks down the killers one by one and kills them. The police investigation leads to Keshava as the prime suspect. The rest of the story is about how he kills everyone responsible for the death of his parents and walks away as a free man.

Keshava Story Analysis

Story structure

Keshava has a simple revenge story with a disability to the protagonist. The revenge stories have a huge market and adding a disability to the protagonist makes the killings more challenging and enhances the conflict. The movie starts with an accident that left the parents of Keshava dead. The director reveals the accident and the people responsible through several segments throughout the film. They split the narration into chapters with each chapter dealing with a murder.

The beginning is good without wasting much time but at the same time, it takes away any empathy for the parents of Keshava. At least, 5-10 minutes of the story with the medical condition of Keshava, relation with his parents, and friendship with Satyabhama (Ritu Varma) would have made the audience emotionally connect to the characters. Otherwise not telling the flashback at the beginning would’ve created suspense. Although these two paths are routine, this is how cinema works.

Screenplay

The screenplay is too fast-paced making the murders look so easy without any conflict. It is only during the Third murder that there is some resistance which makes the film interesting. The interval twist is great with a point of no return but they instantly diluted it in the second half. The conflict is too weak to engage the audience. There is a Four corner opposition since the beginning of the film. The conflicts between Keshava and Satyabhama (suspecting friend), Sharmila (investigating officer), and the victims are all weak. The conflict with each opponent dilutes at some point in the film and it looks plain towards the end. The ending may leave the audience disappointed or wanting more as they have both established and resolved the conflict in the climax.

Characterizations

The characterization is too bad that there is not much thought put into the characterizations of lawyers, police, and doctors. The dialogues are worst in recent times. They have reduced the scope of the film to a routine commercial Telugu film. With a smart screenplay and believable characters, Keshava could have been a milestone in Telugu cinema.

Keshava Major flaws

Dialogues

The worst part of Keshava is dialogues. After the first murder, C.I. Ravi (Ravi Prakash) enters the spot and his dialogue was, “Ee time lo ikkada murder evadu chesuntadu?” The police couldn’t find any clues and they doesn’t have any information about the killer. He later says to the doctor who conducted the post-mortem of the first victim, “Konchem late aina parledu detail ga cheppandi sir.” After the second murder, he comes to the spot and says, “Malli vaadena?” There are many such choppy dialogues throughout the film. And almost all the characters in the film talk alike.

Screenplay

The screenplay is flat throughout the film. It lacks the intensity required for thriller films. While trying to resemble Hollywood films, it lost its soul. The use of chapters for segments is unnecessary as there is no shift between chapters.

Execution of Murders

The murders lack planning and there are many loopholes throughout the film. During the first murder, Nikhil touches the rope with his bare hands. After the second murder, he leaves the tools used at the murder site. He uses cello tape to cover fingerprints for the Third murder. While there are some interesting elements like collecting the stone with his blood and walking into the pond to avoid sniffer dogs, the execution of murders is terrible. Brahmaji doesn’t get out of his jeep but stays in it and dies while it is burning.

Being a law student, Nikhil could be careful but he commits many mistakes leaving his traces everywhere. He could wear a helmet, use hand gloves, collect information from the internet or use more tools. There are several elements of the film they have left without reasoning. There is no point in pasting sticky notes throughout the wall without any order. The director could have thought of something practical.

Keshava Performances

Nikhil Siddharth has never played such a balanced role before and he does a good job. His expressions and body language, particularly during the fight with Raja Ravindra are convincing. His makeover for the film suited the script and his attitude is balanced throughout the film. Ritu Varma is good but her role is limited. She does a good job of expressing confusion and tension without many dialogues. Isha Koppikar perfectly fits her role with a dignified attitude and body language. Rao Ramesh plays a key role and is convincing. Vennela Kishore and Satya are good in comical roles.

Keshava Technical Analysis

The theme of Keshava is top-notch with its freshness but the story and screenplay failed to translate it into a gripping thriller. The dialogues are mediocre. Cinematography is rich but doesn’t follow the narrative. The color hues used in some scenes are unrealistic. Background music by Prasanth Pillai and songs by Sunny MR is good. The action sequences are realistic and the editing is good. The production values by Abhishek Pictures are good. The direction is very good with some brilliant shots.

Conclusion

Keshava is a revenge thriller with an extraordinary theme. If certain things are taken care of, it would have been Rs 50-100 Crore grosser. Overall, it’s an engaging thriller with many flaws.

Keshava

Director: Sudheer Varma

Date Created: 2017-05-19 11:00

Editor's Rating:
2.5
Keshava

Director: Sudheer Varma

Date Created: 2017-05-19 11:00

Editor's Rating:
2.5
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Author
Pavan Teja
Pavan Teja is a content writer with experience in various topics such as films, politics, health, fitness, beauty, religion, science & technology, make money online, english to telugu translation, etc. He previously worked as Telugu film analyst and is currently working as an assistant director.

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