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		Ayyare – Movie Review 
		Cast: Rajendra Prasad, Sivaji, Sai Kumar, Anisha  Singh, Sivaprasad, MS Narayana, Ali, Srinivasa Reddy, Harshavardhan  Reddy, Melkoti, Dhanraj, Pridhvi, Tarjan, Devicharan, Swethasri, Sri  Lalitha, SandhyaJhanak, Narasimha and Mohan 
 Direction: Sagar Chandra
 
 We live in a country where terrorists are given biryani and  patriotism is censored, so goes the collective lament of our men.  There  comes a point in Ayyare when Rajendra Prasad stumbles upon one such  irony that is a feature of our national life.  The hungry and the  destitute are hounded out, branded bandits, naxals, etc., locked up in  jails as under-trials, a few of them even butchered.  While, on the  other hand, fake god men and quacks are feted, worshipped, enriched,  pampered and immortalized.  Left with no choice and having been looted  and beat up by cops who mistake him for a radical, Rajendra dons the  saffron robes, acquires the avatar of a bairagi, calls himself the  childhood friend of Sri Krishna.  That’s how God becomes a partner in  his sweet crime.  Had Sagar Chandra’s Ayyare been released at a time  when there was no piracy, less of Internet, and the audience had faith  in the claims of our filmmakers, it might have had the BO go  ring-a-ring.  Yes, the film makes a quite interesting watch.  What’s  more, there is no trace of obscenity/vulgarity in the movie.
 
 You will be surprised to know that this Rajendra-Shivaji starrer is a  clean watch!  Going by the pre-release characterization of the movie as  having been inspired by Swami Nithyananda’s ‘escapades’, you might get  the feeling while entering the hall that you are a voyeur who has bought  the ticket in hope of being titillated.  Actually, Ayyare is a  stainless entertainer that can be watched with your family.
 It tells two stories in a linear fashion.  The film begins with  Rajendra Prasad being chased by some goons who want to get him killed.   In his attempt to stage an escape, he enters into a bar.  There you see  Shivaji who is fully drunk, drooling and sobbing.  He wants to share his  own story with whoever can give him the reason as to what went wrong  with his life.
 
 Shivaji, seen as Venkatesham, is a mechanic who bumps into Anjali  (Aneesha Singh), the daughter of a rich businessman.  He concocts a  series of lies to woo her and even poses himself as the EAM-CET 1st  ranker of the 1998 batch.  When she finds that he is a big liar, she  decides to break up with him.  Her anger subsides and grief overtakes  her.  Soon, she realizes that she is in love with him and dares to tell  her father that she wants to marry the mundane mechanic.  Surprisingly,  her father gives the nod.  Two scenes later, he becomes violent and  threatens to eliminate Shivaji.
 Why?  Watch out for the second half, which answers many more  questions.  The film is full of unpredictable scenes, but in the course  of the film they are backed by convincing logic.  Ayyare is a  well-written film that has no loose ends.
 
 The second half tells the story of Rajendra, who has race against  time and earn Rs. 10 lakhs so that his little daughter can be operated  for a rare kind of cancer.  He changes into a fake bairagi when all  options close to him for earning money.  He becomes a successful god  man, outside whose house VIPs queue up and around whom informed bhakts  (including an SP and a quantum physicist) interpret his words uttered  out of ignorance.  “Swami, manam chanipoyini taruvata yemi avutundi?”  asks a seeker.  “Manam chanipoyina taruvata yemi avutaundi ante”,  continues a witless Rajendra, “chaste telisi vostundi”.  A disciple  sitting at his legs quotes a verse from the Gita and says that the  Swamiji just put its gist in plain language.  The film has many such  rib-tickling scenes.
 
 Rajendra soon starts feeling guilty.  He wants to disappear from the  scene and save his daughter.  But, he is in the grip of Sai Kumar, who  plays Gajapathi, a greedy cop.  Can Rajendra get out of the tangle?
 
 Ayyare has good performances, apt dialogues, a tight screenplay, and,  above all, a heart of its own.  Nice to see comedy scenes (watch out  for the OMR sheet joke, Ali, MS and Srinivasa Reddy) and sentimental  scenes involving Rajendra and his daughter (watch out for the  conversation in the hospital where the father narrates a fictional story  to the little girl who has just overheard a nurse talking about her  death).  Just when you think that the film is getting pleasantly quirky,  it acquires the form of a human drama in a jiffy.  In fact, in a long  time, I heard the front-benchers whistling at some meaningful dialogues.
 
 Behind every great fortune there is a great crime, someone had  philosophised.  Ayyare tells the story of a divine crime; and the  fortune that the loving father amasses goes to the treatment of poor  children suffering from deadly diseases.  Hope the audience will reward  the sweet attempt.  Meanwhile, thanks for the honest film.
 
 
 
 
 Keywords:Rajendra Prasad, Sivaji, Sai Kumar, Anisha  Singh, Sivaprasad, MS Narayana, Ali, Srinivasa Reddy, Harshavardhan  Reddy, Melkoti, Dhanraj, Pridhvi, Tarjan, Devicharan, Swethasri, Sri  Lalitha, SandhyaJhanak, Narasimha , Mohan ,Sagar Chandra
 
 ,Rajendra-ShivajiAli, MS ,Srinivasa Reddy,Ayyare movie review