The much-awaited theatrical trailer of director Prasanth Varma’s magnum opus Hanu-Man starring Teja Sajja is out now. This is the first film from Prasanth Varma’s Cinematic Universe. Inspired From The Itihasas Of Akhand Bharat, the very first frame transports us into the fantasy universe- Anjanadri.
The real beauty of Anjanadri lies in the Hanuman hill where there is a huge Hanuman statue with water falling from above. The Raghunandana chant in the background gives goosebumps. The protagonist emerges as a superhero as he runs alongside a cheetah, lifts a hill, and bashes baddies in his tribe, because of all the superpowers he possesses.
Then comes the antihero who discovered his superpowers with the help of science and also formed his army looking for that power that makes him the monarch of the world. Upon his arrival, he destroys everything and doesn’t even spare the children. The protagonist is also brutally attacked.
When darkness eclipses Dharma, the ancients shall rise again. We finally got the Darshan of Lord Hanuman in the end. While the teaser showed Hanuman praying to Lord Shriram in an ice cube, he breaks it and comes out in the trailer, indicating he’s there to protect the Dharma. This is next-level stuff and gives goosebumps.
Despite witnessing a visual wonder, the 208-second video doesn’t quench our thirst and we wish for more. Director Prasanth Varma’s efforts can be observed in every single frame. He created a wonderful universe, made us travel along with the characters, and presented the good and the bad in the universe.
Samuthirakani makes his presence felt as a Sadhu. Varalaxmi Sarathkumar appeared as Teja’s sister. Get-up Srinu and Vennela Kishore also got the space. However, the trailer doesn’t show the love track of Teja with Amritha Aiyer. Produced by K Niranjan Reddy of PrimeShow Entertainments, the production values are good.
HANU-MAN will have a Pan World release in several Indian languages including Telugu, Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, English, Spanish, Korean, Chinese, and Japanese on January 12th for Sankranthi.