Taking a fly for a hero carries the film into the digital realm, yet Eega makes a strong case for keeping your effects small and manageable, and having them interact with analogue elements wherever possible. Sure, these are 2012-era effects - the sequence where our hero is rebirthed reminded me of early trance promotional videos - but then there's never any danger of the rotely pixelated overload that characterised Marvel's comparable Ant-Man movies; Rajamouli has visibly thought twice before powering up his processors. He's had to think anew about storytelling, too, but that may be what happens when you write a hero who, after half an hour of screentime, can only buzz for himself. The challenge Rajamouli sets himself, accepts and aces is exactly that the flyspeck Nani faces: how to bring about the downfall of a villain without recourse to the verbal exposition that makes up 90% of feature scripts. Images are forced to take over: sinuous, Fincher-like camera loop-the-loops, first-person representation of a fly's-eye view, sometimes images of words, like the message Nani writes for Bindu in the tracks of his sweetheart's tears. (The poetry in Baahubali didn't come out of nowhere.) It's a touch setbound, lacking the abundant resources the industry would later push this director's way, but Rajamouli commits to his hokum in a manner that circumvents glib, Snakes on a Plane-style winking and only heightens the dramatic stakes. The greatest compliment you can pay Eega is that it really would make for a cracking bedtime story: 12 certificate, pint-sized identification figure waggling a defiant thorax at allcomers, unexpected pockets of emotion and suspense. Even grown-ups may hold their breath when Bindu reaches blithely for a can of Raid.
Eega is available to stream via Prime Video.
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