'Extra Ordinary Man' movie review: Fun meta writing sandpapers this otherwise unmemorable film

A somewhat unheroic name like Sainath is flipped into an anti-heroic Saithan (Satan).

It isn’t always that a film gives an insight into the emotional landscape of its writer, while they were writing the film. Were they ecstatic? Bored? Delusional? Was it their passion project or were they trying to pay their bills? After watching Extra though, I could not help but feel like seasoned screenwriter Vakkantham Vamsi had a lot of fun while writing it. This is an exhibitionist, extroverted kind of writing that prides on its ability to cram as many zany zingers as possible into a single film. It is the kind of writing that wears lowbrow humour on its proverbial sleeve, expecting the audience to shed their preset notions of propriety. Vamsi’s inherent glee seeping through the edifices of an otherwise formal screenplay is the ground zero of Extra’s meta energy. There is also some indulgent wordplay.

A character is named Mohanty, just so that another character can say “Mohanty, moham theeyi” (Mohanty, put your face aside). Another character is named Nero, and sure enough, his name is rhymed in dialogues with hero and zero. A somewhat unheroic name like Sainath is flipped into an anti-heroic Saithan (Satan). 

What makes these observations delightful about Vakkantham Vamsi’s writing is a) how he has already toyed with the idea of Satan & the holy Trinity in Agent, a film he wrote for Surender Reddy earlier this year and b) how the Nero in his film displays a passion for arson, much like his Roman namesake. Make no mistake, this is a writer having fun. And for what’s worth, the nerdy writer in me had some fun watching another nerdy writer at work.

The writerly flairs of Extra also worked for me, when reality and fantasy brush together in the film’s second half, with a protagonist determined to turn fiction into fact locking horns with an antagonist striving to give reality the facade of myth. Vamsi winks with wordy humour another time when one character says, “Neeku Vastaviktam ante ento telusa” (Do you know what reality means), only for a character to obliviously respond, “Avunu deenine Telugu lo reality antaru” (Yeah this is what we call as reality in Telugu). 

We are introduced to Abhinay (Nithiin) as a boy writing an exam under his friend’s name because he finds being another person more interesting than being himself. We register Abhinay’s name, and its literal significance, much later into the film. By then, we had already had a tour of his personality. It is quite endearing to watch the way Abhinay is characterised. It is not uncommon to watch a protagonist play an aspiring actor. But how often do we see a character’s choice of profession dovetail as an extension of the character’s innermost self?

Vamsi’s Extra is not just meta, it is also metaphysical. Abhinay’s characterisation is an exercise in optimism and resilience. He tells a friend at one point, “Don’t be sad that you got a lemon instead of a laddoo. Squeeze it and make lemonade.” When he frowns, it is not because he is berated for his lowly bearings (he is a junior artist), but it is to rehearse sadness for a potential future role that may require it. His penchant for pretending his way through otherwise serious situations makes him meet Likitha (Sreeleela).

What do I tell about Sreeleela in this film? Two weeks ago, she was seen in Aadikeshava. In both films, she plays a CEO. In both films, she gives a high-paying job to the boy she loves. In both films, these boys barely hold any qualifications that deem them eligible for the jobs they receive. In both films, the boys (sorry, Men. Male leads.) stay put at their jobs in Hyderabad for five seconds before jetting off to rescue a village from plutocratic, cookie-clutter peril. Finally, in both films, she goes to similar locations in Western Europe to shoot for dream sequences.

I would not be surprised if they were the same locations. It is one thing to watch a heroine play the same character in every film, but to watch everything about these similar characters also be the same? Did the production houses of Aadikeshava and Extra conspire to save money together by sharing Sreeleela’s dates? Was  Sreeleela’s footage in both these films shot in a single schedule? Is this how Sreeleela manages to balance her rising career in Tollywood alongside her MBBS studies? As far as up-and-coming actors are concerned, I am fond of Sreeleela. She has spunk. She dances like a dream. But I’m beginning to wonder if I would prefer to watch her in a single film which consists of dance sequences from 5 films stitched together rather than five different films. Talk about redacting redundancies. 

For all its quirks, Extra sells itself short with a hero who does not quite match up to the film’s levels of energy on paper. Maybe Extra would have worked if meta-storytelling wasn’t a mainstay modus operandi in contemporary cinema, not just in Tollywood, but also across the globe. For a film that seeks to be “extra” in its spirit, one too many “ordinary” elements derail the film from meeting its potential. Maybe the amount of extraordinary elements that need to stack up to make a decent film is about as many extras as you would need to fill up a frame in a Rajamouli film. Phew. Dandalayya. 

Extra Ordinary Man 

Cast: Nithiin, Sreeleela, Rao Ramesh, Rohini, Sampath Raj, Sudev Nair, Ravi Varma Director: Vakkantham Vamsi 

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