Generally, tamil and malayalam filmmakers create works that honour their respective cultures' traditions and philosophies. In his debut film, "Balagam," venu Veldandi, who is best known as the comedic actor Tillu, tells a tale in a similar spirit and with a great sense of conviction. The film, which is set in rural telangana and primarily promotes the idea that families should stick together, is quite different from typical commercial telugu movies in terms of its locale, plot, and treatment.

A few minutes into the narrative, the family patriarch passes away, and the rest of the movie is about what happens next. Venu's narration of the tale occasionally uses dark humour while masterfully portraying several scenes that portray rural life. priyadarshi and his future bride-to-be discreetly romancing while the deceased is in their home is a lighter moment in this dark comedic approach, but the sight of rural ladies sobbing as everyone enters the house to pay their last respects to the deceased is a heartbreaking moment.

While the later half of the movie is all about sentiments and tear-jerker moments, the beginning of the scenes seems to be intentionally comical. The telugu film venu Yaldandi succeeds in addressing the idea of crows not eating the food left for the deceased soul (a custom in most Hindu families) by exposing horrible scenes of how certain family members cannot conceal their egos even after the death of a family head.

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