Last year, the Telugu film 35: Chinna Katha Kaaduposed a question to its audience: why zero — apparently without worth — is worth more than nine if placed after a one. The show was a discreet yet effective means of empowering math-challenged students. Director Sunny Sanjay returns this year with Anaganaga, streaming on ETV Win, and offers science lessons — from eclipses to how red and white blood cells work — in short, story-based episodes.
At the center of the movie is Vyas Kumar, a teacher-storyteller portrayed with subdued sincerity by Sumanth, in one of his finest performances. He makes learning come alive for kids who can't catch it the conventional way.
Loosely based on the Marathi movie Eka Kay Zaala, Anaganaga takes a simple approach, employing its plot as a gentle didactic tool. Like Taare Zameen Parand 35, it takes a predictable underdog route, presenting its message with simplicity and in clarity without patronizing its audience.
In the early sections of Anaganaga, Vyas (Sumanth) steps into a strict, high-pressure international school sporting a broad smile, and his first conflict is with the school chairman's (Srinivas Avasarala) strict regulations. After that, the arc of the story is predictable, but it wins the audience over by reaffirming the power of storytelling as a learning device, and presenting a better option than rote learning.
Vyas's domestic life parallels his teaching adventure. His wife, Bhagya (Kajal Choudhary), is the principal of his school, and their child Ram (Viharsh) is just one of the numerous pupils having difficulty keeping up. While Vyas is affable and laidback, Bhagya bears the burden of being the primary breadwinner of the family, and her stress often finds its way into their personal life. Their tensions are played out in a considerate manner, typically in front of a mirror, visually reaffirming their disparate worldviews and emotional states.
Vyas can be dismissed as a "failed story," but Anaganaga is not simply a story of one teacher demonstrating that his way is effective. It silently examines more profound questions: Do teachers or parents ever pause to wonder what really scares a child? What if a struggling student is not confronted with judgement but with reassurance that failing is not the end of the road?
The movie is a harsh critique of the gloomy side of academic rivalry — rewarding toppers with podium places and publicly shaming others who falter, even going to the extent of corporal punishment. It promotes compassion in education and wonders at what is sacrificed when sport and personality are pushed aside by the tyranny of marks. It reminds us of those times when a dreaded science class took the place of a cherished language class, and that familiarity lends the film its subtlety power.
What grounds Anaganaga is emotional truth. Sumanth's performance as Vyas is restrained and reflective, he is not a heroic troublemaker, merely a man attempting to connect with children through compassion. Most of his act is wordless, using gesture and eye, particularly in scenes with his son Ram. Their intimate moment over a Mufasa-Simba anecdote registers heavier by the end. Viharsh (playing Ram) both beams innocence and vulnerability, and Kajal Choudhary rides restraint and frustration effortlessly. Together, the cast injects a kind sincerity into a film that ultimately seeks: what would it mean to really teach with kindness?
On its last leg, Anaganaga walks familiar ground with a subplot involving health that threatens to seem clichéd. But to the film's credit, the storytelling employs this turn with caution — to revisit a previous question put to Vyas: what legacy will he be leaving behind for his son? The response, woven into the film's philosophy, is not material, but emotional.
Anu Hasan's warm cameo provides the critical insight, carefully stripping back the layers of Vyas's own formative influences. Even the narrator, it appears, must cling to his own story. Her fleeting part serves to underscore the film's powerful theme that sometimes power is found in looking within, in discovering again the will to go on.
Visually, nothing feels overdone. Pavan Pappula’s cinematography, Chandu Ravi’s gentle score, and the unobtrusive production design keep the film grounded. A few characters may lack dimension — like the overbearing school chairman — but the film does not stumble because of them.
Anaganaga can take a familiar path, but it makes its point elegantly. It not only celebrates storytelling as a pedagogical tool but as a means of healing, connecting, and remembering what truly matters.
'Anaganaga' movie review: - A Heartwarming Telegu tale of Education and Empathy
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