Tag: spices

Kantara : Chapter 1 – A review

One of my all time favourite movies has been Kantara , so obviously I had to watch any prequel , sequel or series (if at all) was released. That being said, I was not really in a happy mind space, before going to the movie. Luckily, everything changed once I sat in the multiplex, among the audience. (There was a silent anticipation in the theater, before the movie started,  probably because we were all waiting for the signature, Wooahh! call, by the Bhoot Kola performers)

Without further ado, let me jump right into the review.

 

Movie Name : Kantara : Chapter 1

Released On : October 2nd, 2025

QB watched On : October 4th, 2025

Starring : Rishabh Shetty, Jayaram,  Gulshan Devaiah,  Rukmini Vasanth and others

Directed By : Rishabh Shetty

Review:

The movie starts with the cruel king of Bangra, Vijayendra, who hunts down tribals and makes them his slaves in his kingdom.  Although he has everything,  he is not satisfied. He is after the spices found at the mystical Eswara Vanam, deep inside the Kantara forest.

Vijayendra, reaches the divine part of the forest, along with his probably 7 year old son, Rajasekhara and army following them.  The king and his army perishes, thanks to the Daiva Ganas in the forest, only the child survives, who later on becomes the king, played by Mallu actor Jayaram (My favourite).

Rajasekhara has ties with the dark magic users, the Kadapa people. Though his son Kulasekhara is born healthy, his daughter Kanakavathi had to be breast fed by a Kadapa woman, to cure her useless legs.

Meanwhile, the tribals find a newborn baby boy, seemingly with divine intervention, raise him as their own. No prizes for guessing he is Berme, our own Rishabh Shetty. He looks the part of a tribal, with raw power. (He even wears curvy, off-white earrings, which I later realised were probably the tooth of a wild boar, a subtle reference to the divine Varaha Roopam.)

The Bangra kingdom is now under the rule of a new king, Kulasekhara (Gulshan Devaiah), who is not much of a ruler. He is alcoholic, lazy, ignorant and arrogant at the same time. His sister Kanakavathi (Rukmini Vasanth), looking ethereal and exquisite is more of an active ruler.

The first half is about how Berme and his gang, ditch the forest, come to the kingdom of Bangra, learn trading etc. The fight scenes are interesting. There is a brief cameo by Rishabh Shetty’s wife too!

When Berme is captured by the king, we get to see Peppe, the son of a head port trader. (Sadly, the actor who played Peppe, Rakesh Poojari died even before the release of the movie, by heart attack. RIP. He was in his early 30s)

Coming back to the movie, the first half is rather slow and long, because, the director Rishabh had to give us an idea of the world surrounding Kantara.

Just before the movie goes into intermission, Berme and his friends come face to face, for the first time with Kadapa people. They are this gross looking people, whose face have more cracks than my feet. Their makeup is so good, I began to hate them, as soon as I saw them. (After seeing the Kadapa tribe, I understood what dark magic and dark thoughts make your face look like, UGLY!)

The movie makes heady progress, thanks to the closeness of Princess Kanakavathi and Berme. This triggers King Kulasekhara into waging a war on the mere tribals. He kills off most of them, but brings on the death wrath of Guliga Daiva, after killing Berme’s adoptive mother. (What you sow, is what you get!)

The next scene is what menace looks like. Berme transforms into Guliga Daiva and spectacular acting follows. (I would love to interview Rishabh Shetty’s costars about their feelings, being in the middle of his fabulous acting during these high octane sequences, I want to know everything!)

The scene that stood out for me is after Guliga Daiva leaves Berme, after the violence and all, we see Berme is shattered,  coming to terms with the deaths in his tribe. I loved the hopeless expression Rishabh could come up with, showing his helplessness. Bravo!

All this is a pre-cursor to the grand finale.

After being at loggerheads with the Bangra kingdom, the tribals of Kantara are ready to fight it out one last time.

This time around, the Bangra king has the help of Kadapa people, with Princess Kanakavathi in the lead.

All is well, that ends well. The final sequence is replete with many memorable scenes. Some stick into your brain, as if they were our own experiences. The hero Berme, is heroic, without being over-the-top. I can’t put into words the acting calibre of Rishabh Shetty. He is the soul of the movie. I like how the villains die in a jiffy, they can’t spar with the divine Guliga Berme!

Just like how the first Kantara made us sit up and notice, this one too forces us to watch it again and again anddddd again!

It took me more than 4 days to process the movie and form words for the review.

If my next post is late, you need to understand,  I am probably in my room, watching other movies directed and/or acted by Rishabh Shetty.

Can anyone blame me for that??

P.S:

1. I loved the screenplay. What will happen next, was my thought while watching the movie.

2. The attempt at comedy in the first half was unnecessary. But I am beginning to think that, that is Rishabh Shetty’s strategy, to give a slow start and end the movie on a high! ( even Kantara was like that)

3. While talking to Mr.Bee, I understood that Rishabh Shetty is to film industry, what M.S.Dhoni is to Indian cricket. Both are confident leaders and are willing to step up and get the job done!

When top order batsmen fail, Dhoni becomes a middle order batsmen and finishes off the game. Similarly, Rishabh Shetty finishes off the movie with his peak acting and fantastic direction.

4. I was apprehensive about Kantara: Chapter 1, because Kantara set such high standards, who knew if even Rishabh Shetty could top it? He is surely going to sweep the National Award for best actor and best director.

5. Let me add, the tiny detail of bringing important Kantara actors into this prequel too was a good touch. The cinematography,  music and VFX, take a bow!

Till the next post, cheerio!

Days of Leisure

Day 8:

We had been travelling for a week already and Mr.Bee is the sole driver for our trip. Adding to that, KBee and I were down with cold. I had taken a head bath and towel dried my hair, still, I caught a cold! (Carry a hair dryer with you, if you are going to visit a temple and have little time to towel dry the hair, thanks to the temple timings and travel constraints.) Hotels in India don’t provide hair dryers, except for super luxury ones, which have foreign visitors! (The Jaipur Hotel we stayed at, last year had hair dryers, separate ‘he’ and ‘she’ wash basins and Jacuzzi too, with two different doors to access the area! Such opulence!)

Anyway….

We woke up early, had our baths, had breakfast, rode an auto to reach the Kukke Subrahmanya Swamy temple.

A clean and peaceful temple town – Subramanya, Karnataka — Pic Source : Google

Although the distance from the hotel to the temple is walk-able, we preferred the auto, because it was quite sunny! (The temperature App in my cell showed it was 32 Centigrade and we are used to more than that in Hyderabad, but we were closer to the beach city Mangalore!) It is best to use the auto services than take the car and face parking difficulties.

We breezed through the temple, with it being an off season for visitors. We returned to hotel in half an hour, spending more time near the ATM to draw out some cash, than in the temple itself! GBee and KBee wanted to buy the beach toys which were readily available near the temple shops.

One set each for both the kiddos.

With this little purchase, we returned to our room. At lunch time, we went to the in-house restaurant, had our lunch and returned to the room. We decided to not travel anywhere for the day. We ate, we drank, we watched T.V. and overall had a lazy day. Our original plan had been to visit either Dharmasthala or Sringeri, depending on our mood that day. Interestingly, our mood that day was to be lazy. So we didn’t budge from our hotel room!

Meanwhile Mr.Bee got the car checked and cleaned, since we travelled in rains and the car mud guards were heavier by a couple of kilos!

With a simple dosa dinner, we ended our day.

Day 9:

After the much needed rest, we woke up by 8 a.m, freshened up and had our breakfast.  We packed our bags and checked out of the hotel. We were on our way to Southadka, an open to sky Ganesha Temple (no structure is covering the Moola Virat, Maha Ganapathi), 35 km away from the Kukke Subrahmanya temple! (Visiting both the divine brothers Ganesha and Subrahmanya in the reverse order has been fun. I was happy, because both GBee and KBee are named after the said Gods as Ganesh and Karthikeya.)

A one-of-a-kind temple, without a Garba Gudi. Deity is visible to all, from far and wide! Pic Sourced from Google.

BTW, if you are up for it, there is a shopping complex with spices, coffee powders and antiques available and you can shop till you drop. We avoided the shops because the kids wanted junk food and we had to divert them with all our new found street smart attitude.

Well within half an hour, we ended our darshan and started our journey to Mangalore. Incidentally, when I turned on the radio, I could hear Malayalam songs, so between Subrahmanya and Mangalore, I think we also crossed the Kerala state border for a brief period of time.

The drive was less than 2 hours and we reached Mangalore on time for lunch. I was reminded of my Infosys Mysore roomie, RR, who worked in Mangalore for 2 years. God, I am out of touch with most of my friends! (Sad reality of stay-at-home moms, who also happen to be introverts!)

We stayed at the VAZCO Mangalore Beach resort. All we had to do was cross the 10 feet road to reach the sandy beach! (Best experience ever!) As we checked-in, I observed that the  resort was empty except for us and a couple! I was disappointed.  But since it was Thursday and  people generally don’t travel to beaches on weekdays, I decided to wait and watch.

We had yummy, paper thin Chapathis, with paneer sabzi and lassi glass-sized watermelon juice, to wash down our food! We had booked a family room which comes with a separate seating area outside our room and that was where we spent eating our lunches and dinners during our stay. The separate area comes in handy if you have kids who throw half the food outside their plates! The kids would eat messily and we could go into our room and sleep, while the service staff would clean it without disturbing us and our privacy, a win-win.

After the lunch, we rested for an hour, freshened up, wore our beach outfits with me applying ample sunscreen lotion. (Turns out, at the end of our beach holiday, only I didn’t tan at all. The kids and Mr.Bee had a Mangalore beach tan!)

KBee, GBee and I had a blast, making sand castles and Mr.Bee ended up being our beach photographer. We took a zip lock pouch with us to store our ‘so-called’ water-proof cells and the room key fob. Zip locks are life savers!

We returned to the resort, spent another hour completely hijacking the swimming pool. We had a blast. After washing off most of the sand from our bodies, we returned to our room and ordered garama garam onion pakoras with green chillies for added effect! Yummy! Even the fault finding kiddos ate in silence!

Onion Pakora with added green chillies – Soul Food!

We spent the rest of the evening watching T.V. and resting. KBee had been doing good. He didn’t have a relapse of fever and I was happy and thankful for that. (I met some other mothers during our course of vacation and they would judge me for bringing a tiny kiddo for a 10 day vacation. If we are prepared for food and medical requirements, no harm in travelling with a 2 year old baby. )

We really needed a break from our mundane life and thankfully, the vacation had done the trick of recharging our depleting batteries.

With a yummy yummy fried rice and lip smacking masala butter milk, we ended our day and slept like logs!

P.S:

  1. Don’t ever miss butter milk in Karnataka. Anywhere in Karnataka, buttermilk is to die for.
  2. Who knew a vacation can be at once hectic and leisurely!
  3. Queen Bee’s favourite food is anything with ample green chillies! Weirdly, green chillies make my mouth water!
  4. If you ever have severe cold or if you have breathing issues and allergies, it is always best to visit a beach area. The salty beach air works like a natural nebulizer and clears up even tough sinuses!

Till the next post… cheerio!

© 2026

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑