The film combines action, emotion and family values in a good, spirited way and this movie known as Anjaniputra brings out the best of Puneeth Rajkumar. With the help of Harsha A., the director, the movie consists of strenuous episodes, as well as emotional scenes, providing a lively storyline with bright colors and focus on loyalty, forgiveness, and justice. It was deeply moving as it was the story about Raja a man who was disowned by his family but had the sense of righteousness to do what he was supposed to do which was to stand up and defend his loved ones during a time of trouble.
The actors work is good and Puneeth playing the rugged but vulnerable avatar of Raja and Rashmika Mandanna bringing in style and lovely luster to romantic subplot. The side characters also do not leave the story dry, representing family relationships and villainous characters realistically. The movie is vivid in visual representation and manages to capture the culture and action scenes dramatically, and the music plays the role of boosting the emotional charge and energetic presentation of the movie.
The emphasis on family relations and redemption in the film and its focus was what impressed me the most and left the feeling of strength of understanding and forgiveness. Despite a few hackneyed genre tropes, there is the earnestness of the work, and a sense of feeling that makes the whole film, and especially, “Anjaniputra”, rise above the line of an average action movie. All in all, it is a happy story of love, justice and family – charismatically and authoritively presented – that had me feeling happy and thoughtful about the bonds we cannot break that make us who we are.