Rishab Shetty’s ‘Kantara’ is a solid masala-myth that, despite its issues, finds new ways to tell an old story about ‘The Chosen One’
- Trinity Auditorium

- Oct 6, 2022
- 1 min read
Spoilers ahead…

Rishab Shetty writes, directs, and delivers a joyous and very exuberant performance as Shiva, the protagonist of Kantara – but he’s absent from the opening stretch that is set in the nineteenth century. We hear a tale about a king who had everything. He had the love of his family. He had the love of his subjects. What he did not have was peace of mind. There’s a second time period, in the mid-1970s, and a third, in 1990. The screenplay uses many devices to tie the past and the present – or rather, to bring the past to the present and show how the two are always intertwined. There’s the sound of anklets heard in a forest. There’s a near-mythical sword passed on from the days of the king to the days we find Shiva in. There’s the reference to Vishnu’s third incarnation, Varaha Avatar, where the god became a boar.
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