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V is that bloody action film, the only difference is that it seems to make sense. With Sammahonam, the filmmaker poked fun at Telugu film industry’s first love, masala films with asinine action, with the protagonist’s mother saying contemporary films are all about loud sound and blood-splashing violence. V contrasts every aspect of Krishna’s previous film, Sammohanam, a jaunty family film. Instances in which the blend of genres worked well were 1-Nenokkadine and Goodachari, which remain the finest Telugu-language action-thrillers (there was Dhruva, but it’s a remake). On the action front, Telugu cinema has its own rules of action, so it’s better left untouched. There have been a few fine thrillers, such as Aithe, Anasuya, Agent Sai Sreenivas Athreya, and HIT, but they weren’t packed with the essential jaw-breaking and bone-cracking scenes. Sudheer Varma’s Keshava and Ranarangam didn’t make a mark either. Big-budget catastrophes, like Spyder and Saaho, were intended as action thrillers, only to lack both facets. Originally set for release one day after India’s lockdown began, V is anticipated to be Mohan Krishna Indraganti’s take on the action-thriller genre, a fusion that is scarce in an industry obsessed with ‘full-meal entertainers’. In an ideal scenario, this film would have completed its theatrical run and hit OTT platforms by now. There are a ton of big-ticket films at various stages of production, however, I believe these five films have the potential to substantially bolster the trajectory that the Telugu film industry is headed in. Staying optimistic that the day cinephiles return to theatres is not a millennium away, here are five Telugu films that are worth crossing off calendar dates for. As we continue to savor existing content on OTT platforms, it is certain that that cannot fill the void that the lack of new theatrical releases has created.