The Boyapati Srinu–Balakrishna collaboration returns with Akhanda 2: Thaandavam, a mythic-action follow-up that doubles down on everything the 2021 blockbuster delivered: fiery monologues, cosmic symbolism, ritualistic rage, and a Nandamuri Balakrishna who doesn’t just walk into frames — he erupts into them.
If Akhanda was a celebration of NBK’s mass persona, Akhanda 2 is a full-fledged Boyapati-Balayya cinematic universe, built entirely on calamity, chants, chaos and unrestrained devotion.
⭐ Story: From the Indo-Tibet Border to a Global Dharma War
The film wastes no time. We open on the Indo-Tibet border where geopolitical tension is about to explode. A Chinese general (Sangay Tsheltrim), seeking India’s “weakness,” concludes that the country’s spiritual foundation — Sanatana Dharma — is its core strength. Destroy that, and the nation collapses.
His plan? Unleash a bio-war during the Maha Kumbh Mela, triggering mass casualties and a nationwide crisis.
This premise pushes the franchise into international territory, elevating the scale but not necessarily the emotional weight.
Meanwhile:
- Janani (Harshaali Malhotra), Murali Krishna’s daughter and a DRDO scientist, becomes central to the antidote mission.
- An army officer (Samyuktha) mentors her, prioritising the nation over her own survival.
- Murali Krishna (Balakrishna’s second role), now an older MLA, appears intermittently, offering political commentary and social messaging.
But the real force arrives when the world begins to crumble.
🔱 Akhanda Returns: A Cosmic Warrior Forged in Fury
As Akhanda Rudra Sikandar Aghora, Balakrishna once again taps into mythic grandeur — summoning divine rage, powerful Shiva mantras, and supernatural feats that bend the limits of physical reality (and physics entirely).
Akhanda:
- Kills 20 men with a single trishul strike
- Brings down helicopters
- Bends guns
- Deflects advanced weapons without blinking
- Fights sorcerers, armies, gangsters and cosmic forces
He isn’t just a man here — he’s a spiritual guardian, carrying India’s cultural essence on his shoulders.
Boyapati Srinu uses NBK’s persona as a living temple of mass action, crafting set pieces whose logic dissolves into pure fan service.
🎭 Performances: A One-Man Show, By Design
Despite the ensemble:
- Balakrishna is the entire axis of the film — cosmic, loud, unshakeable.
- Aadhi Pinisetty impresses even with limited screen time.
- Samyuktha gets a brief role with minimal scope.
- Harshaali Malhotra adds sincerity but the emotional threads never fully land.
The relationships — father-daughter, mother-son, or even national-level bonds — are touched upon but never explored. This is a film driven by energy, not emotion.
⚡ Direction & Style: Boyapati’s Temple of Mass Cinema
Boyapati Srinu leans entirely into excess — calamities, chants, extreme violence, spiritual monologues, ritualistic visuals, and thunderous BGM from Thaman S.
Logic is optional. Spiritual elevation is mandatory.
The film doesn’t aim for patriotism or jingoism; instead, it frames the crisis as a cosmic battle for dharma, not territory or politics. The story is thin and frequently chaotic, but the spectacle stays committed to its universe.
⭐ Final Verdict: A Devotional Mass Frenzy for Balayya Fans Only
Akhanda 2: Thaandavam isn’t here to convert new audiences. It’s made strictly for Balayya devotees who want divine fury, mass moments, impossible action, and a hero who doesn’t fight evil — he obliterates it.
For those fans, this is a festival.
For everyone else, it’s a loud, logic-defying mythic-action opera powered entirely by NBK’s aura.
