Ram Charan Teja transforms in 'Rangasthalam'

There is something enormously endearing about a superstar trying to shed his image to get into the skin of his character the way, say, Uttam Kumar did in Satyajit Ray’s “Nayak” or Rajesh Khanna in Basu Bhattacharya’s “Aavishkar”, writes Subhash K. Jha. In “Rangasthalam”, Ram Charan Teja transforms in front of our eyes. It is […]

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There is something enormously endearing about a superstar trying to shed his image to get into the skin of his character the way, say, Uttam Kumar did in Satyajit Ray's "Nayak" or Rajesh Khanna in Basu Bhattacharya's "Aavishkar", writes Subhash K. Jha.

In "Rangasthalam", Ram Charan Teja transforms in front of our eyes. It is almost like watching a magic show where the entire appearance of the actor undergoes a sea change as we gawk in open-mouthed amazement. Except that here Ram Charan is not ostentatious in his mutation. He changes his personality, yes. But in doing so he makes sure he merges into the rustic rugged violent milieu of injustice and inequality where one man plays an evil God.