![]() ![]() It's a long scene where guns, violence, and gore have just been thrown in like it was being distributed at some store for free and you think that Vijay has finally done avenging the attack on his father. Especially a scene where hundreds of masked men come charging at Ranbir (dressed in a white kurta and dhoti) with first guns and then axes as our man-child protagonist goes gleefully charging at them with an Indian-made bazooka. Stylish and elaborately choreographed with a great background score, the action scenes are completely new to Bollywood. Writer, editor, and director Sandeep Reddy Vanga had said in an interview that he would teach India how action films are made and he was not joking about it. I am using the word 'different' for the lack of a better word to describe the emotions I felt going through that long gore fest that Vanga has indulged in. The basic plot of avenging one's parents is not new to Bollywood but it is Vanga's treatment that makes Animal different. For him, nothing can be more important than his father and he is ready to put his marriage with Gayatri (Rashmika Mandanna) at stake to protect his father. Vijay then turns barbaric and goes on a killing spree until he finds the real culprit and motive. Vijay returns home from the US with family in tow after eight long years when there is an attempt to kill his beloved father. ![]()
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