Mass Jathara (2025) Movie ft. Ravi, Sreeleela, and Rajendra
Ravi Teja steps back into what he does best with Mass Jathara, his 75th film. This one’s directed by newcomer Bhanu Bhogavarapu and pairs him again with Sreeleela after they worked together in Dhamaka. Naveen Chandra takes on the bad guy role, and the film came out on October 31, 2025.
Mass Jathara is a full package Telugu action movie with comedy, romance, and family moments. Sithara Entertainments and Fortune Four Cinemas backed the project. Bheems Ceciroleo handled the music, Vidhu Ayyanna shot it, and Naveen Nooli edited the whole thing.
The Story Takes You to Railway Tracks
Ravi Teja plays a railway police officer who goes after a drug lord running a massive smuggling ring. It’s not rocket science plotting, but the railway police setting gives it a different flavor than your usual cop movie.
Naveen Chandra is the drug kingpin controlling illegal operations. The whole movie builds around their clash. Sreeleela enters as Tulasi, the love interest, and she actually dubbed her own voice using a Srikakulam accent. First time she’s done that in any film.
The Performances Work
Ravi Teja brings his usual high energy to the screen. He delivers those mass dialogues with punch, fights hard, and still manages to crack jokes when needed. He even hurt himself during shooting but kept going. His character calls himself “criminal police” who belongs to the “war zone” instead of railway zones. Classic Ravi Teja stuff.
Sreeleela holds her own next to him. She brings charm, dances well, and handles the emotional bits without going overboard. Their pairing clicks, which matters because the film needs that chemistry to work.
Naveen Chandra surprised me as the villain. He doesn’t just show up and look mean. He makes his character feel threatening. The scenes where he faces off with Ravi Teja create real tension instead of just being filler moments between songs.
What Clicks Hard
The opening fight grabs you immediately. No slow buildup or lengthy introductions. The film throws you straight into action, and it sets up what kind of ride you’re in for.
The Jathara festival sequence stands out as the film’s biggest moment. The makers spent over 6 crores building a railway station set just for this. That investment shows on screen. The festival brings color, energy, and cultural flavor that Telugu audiences connect with naturally.
Bheems Ceciroleo’s music lifts the whole experience. “Tu Mera Lover” became a hit before the movie released. “Rangu Ratri” and “Dandakam Jathara” bring those folk beats that make you tap your feet. The background score pumps up action scenes exactly when they need it.
Vidhu Ayyanna’s camera work captures everything clearly. Whether it’s the festival crowds or the fight choreography, you see what’s happening. The 144-minute runtime moves at a decent pace. The editing keeps things tight without dragging unnecessary scenes.
Where It Stumbles
Here’s the thing. The story doesn’t break new ground. Honest cop versus drug mafia? We’ve seen this dance before. The railway police angle adds freshness, but the core remains familiar territory.
The film follows that mass cinema playbook pretty strictly. Hero enters, villain threatens, romance happens, interval bang, climax fight. You can predict beats before they arrive. That might bother people who watch a lot of Telugu movies.
Supporting characters don’t get much room to breathe. They appear, do their job, and fade away. Could have used more depth there. Some dialogues echo things Ravi Teja said in his earlier cop films. Feels a bit repetitive if you’ve followed his career.
Critics and Crowds Weigh In
Reviews from media websites came mostly positive. Sites praised how the film delivers mass entertainment without pretending to be something else. They highlighted Ravi Teja’s performance and the overall presentation as strong points.
Premiere shows got good reactions. People on social media gave it around 3.75 out of 5. The intro fight, the lead pair’s chemistry, and the Jathara sequence got the most love. Multiple reviews mentioned Naveen Chandra’s villain act specifically.
I noticed families seemed to enjoy it together. The mix of action, comedy, and emotion works for different age groups. The festival backdrop gives it that cultural connect. Hardcore Ravi Teja fans got exactly what they wanted from him.
Some viewers did mention the predictability factor. If you regularly watch mass movies, you might see things coming. But that didn’t seem to hurt the overall enjoyment for most people walking out of theaters.
Bottom Line
Rating: 3.5/5
Mass Jathara does what it sets out to do. It gives you a solid mass movie experience with Ravi Teja firing on all cylinders. The film doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel. It just polishes what already works in this format.
Yes, the story follows familiar beats. But the execution keeps you engaged. The technical team did their homework. That Jathara sequence alone justifies watching this on a big screen instead of waiting for streaming.
Ravi Teja fans won’t feel disappointed. Sreeleela proved she can match his energy. Naveen Chandra brought real menace to his role. Director Bhanu Bhogavarapu handled his first film competently, showing he understands mass cinema requirements.
If you’re looking for groundbreaking storytelling, this won’t satisfy you. But if you want pure entertainment with action, comedy, and those fist-pumping mass moments, Mass Jathara delivers. It’s made for the festival crowd and achieves what it aimed for. Sometimes that’s enough.
					








