Since the rain seems to bring them together they make a pact to meet again when it next pours. Venkat and Sailaja are separated as the train moves off, but find each other the next time precipitation hits their local market in Warangal. There’s a great pigeon move in here too and I’m very impressed by Trisha’s grasp of the bird-impression genre of dance step. Once the rain starts Sailaja leaps out onto the platform to dance with total child-like abandon. She follows the ‘dance as if no-one is watching’ creed, despite the fact that everyone is actually watching her and this is a very fun song with plenty of dorky moves by Trisha. Venkat and Bhadranna first both see her at a train station where their train has been delayed. Sailaja is a fun-loving girl who adores the rain, and I fully understand and endorse her compulsion to dance in it at every possible opportunity. Trisha plays Sailaja, the girl who both Venkat (Prabhas) and Bhadranna (Gopichand) lay claim to.
Add in Prakash Raj as ‘Prakash Bad Dad’ and it’s much more entertaining than it first sounds. But when one of those two is Prabhas and the other is Gopichand it’s suddenly a lot more fun. The story involves two guys fighting over the heroine like dogs over a bone, with each one growling ‘she’s mine’ at appropriate intervals.
Varsham is a typical Prabhas action/romance movie. Even though his films seem to follow a similar pattern, he brings enough personality to each character that I’m usually happy to watch no matter how many plot holes or illogical scenes there seem to be and this film does have a few of those. He always seems to be a little surprised to be the hero of any film and with his height and general gangliness he has a ‘St Bernard puppy’ type of cuteness that is very endearing.