Where is Baahubali's love

Gia 2022-04-20 09:01:47

I was going to write a short review, but it got out of hand when I wrote it.

The special effects, scenes, costumes, soundtracks, singing and dancing are really good. But I really feel that the plot is a bit disconnected, like a short story. Most of the plot expressions are a bit rough, and some just reflect a point. Big and empty. Perhaps because of this, the emotions of the actors are all one-sided, and they are all excited and indignant, so I don't know what to say. Moreover, I couldn't understand the character's character, I only got a vague outline. After watching both movies, I felt that the female protagonist, the queen and the male protagonist's adoptive mother, the male protagonist's biological mother is like a woman, and the male protagonist and his father are even more Needless to say. They are all equally strong (maybe India likes plump beauty), and then they all feel particularly fierce and angry.

I feel that the hero's father's protagonist's halo is too powerful, and it can be called the man's version of "white lotus". He was hurt and betrayed by the people closest to him, yet he could still die so calmly. It makes me think that the three views of this drama are not right. The screenwriter always likes to use tragedies to express great affection and righteousness, but it only gives me the feeling that the male protagonist's father is no longer a human being, because he has only other people in his eyes. Indeed, he is the god that the Indians sing. And stupid loyalty is not a religion in my opinion, because it has surpassed his conscience. They all seem to have lost their ego... What's the point of living like this (:|)

Some plots are still incomprehensible, such as why the heroine suddenly fell in love with the hero? Why does the male lead tattoo the female lead?

(to be continued)

View more about Baahubali: The Beginning reviews

Extended Reading

Baahubali: The Beginning quotes

  • Sivagami: The merits of a King are evaluated not by the number of enemies he has killed but by the number of his own people he has saved. During the battle Bhallaladeva's focus was only in vanquishing the enemy. Baahubali, while killing the enemy also managed to save his subjects. That is the difference between a soldier and a king.

  • Sivagami: If you kill a hundred men you will be called a great warrior, but if you save one life, you will be called God!