Ala Vaikunthapurramuloo Full Movie HD | Hindi Dubbed 2020




Valmiki and Ramachandra start their career as clerks in the company of Ananth Radhakrishna, or ARK. Ramachandra who marries ARK's daughter, Yasu becomes wealthy while Valmiki remains poor. On the day of the birth of both their children, Ramachandra's son appears to be dead. When nurse Sulochana informs Valmiki about this, he seizes the opportunity to secretly switch the child with his own, so that his son would have a better life. After switching them, however, the apparently dead child begins to cry. Sulochana tries to switch them back but Valmiki prevents her, pushing her accidentally off a ledge. Sulochana goes into a coma, while Valmiki gets a leg cramp that makes him limp permanently.

Ala Vaikuntapuramlo is centered on a character called Bantu (played by Allu Arjun) and his efforts to please his cold-hearted father Valmiki (played by Murali Sharma). Born in a middle-class family and forced to live life with compromises, Bantu gets a shot at turning his life around when he crosses paths with millionaire Ramchandra (Jayaram). The rest of the story is about how Bantu makes his way into Ramchandra’s family and fixes some broken relationships.

Ala Vaikuntapuramlo lets Allu Arjun transform into the kind of performer we haven’t seen in recent years. He plays his character with a kind of ease that is rarely seen in mainstream heroes and he makes Bantu one of the liveliest roles of his career. Allu Arjun shines in almost every department but his dancing makes you realise why he is one of the best dancers in the country. He is well complemented by Murali Sharma, who is terrific as one of the pivotal characters of the film.

The romance portion between Allu Arjun and Pooja Hegde is problematic in the beginning as he cannot stop staring at her legs. But Trivikram balances it by making his hero talk about women and consent in one of the crucial scenes. As much as I cringed in the romance scenes, I feel that a star of Arjun’s stature talking about consent is a big deal.

Ala Vaikuntapuramlo is undoubtedly one of Trivikram’s better films in recent years. While one can argue that he plays it safe by taking the tried-and-tested family template, at least he doesn’t disappoint and that is laudable.