Major Ravi

Major Ravi’s filmography kinda reads like a crash course in guts and glory. The guy doesn’t mess around with his stories. You look at Mission 90 Days (2007), and suddenly you’re neck-deep in one of India’s biggest manhunts, the aftermath of Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination. Major Mahadevan, played with that rugged, no-nonsense attitude, leads a crack team of commandos on a ticking clock. There’s tension everywhere – not just gunfights and chase sequences, but those quieter moments where the team’s staring down failure, bureaucracy, and their own doubts. The film, honestly, doesn’t care about gloss. It’s all sweat, adrenaline, and the ache that comes from chasing justice when the odds are trash. Skip ahead to Karma Yodha (2012) and things get even grittier. This one’s a full-on cop drama, with Mohanlal as a tough-as-nails super cop who’s barely holding it together. The movie digs into the underbelly of crime, trafficking, and the kind of corruption that makes you want to throw your popcorn at the screen. There’s a relentless pace and, sure, a few melodramatic touches, but Major Ravi’s own experience in the police and army really bleed through. It’s less about heroes in capes, more about men who get bruised and keep limping forward. And then there’s 1971: Beyond Borders (2017). War drama. Dust, blood, mud, and brotherhood. The film jumps between timelines, digging up stories of Indian and Pakistani soldiers during the Indo-Pak war. Major Ravi, again, goes for realism over gloss, throwing you into the trenches with characters who love, fear, and break down. It’s not just about battles—it’s about the people fighting them, and the scars they carry long after the last bullet’s fired.

Major Ravi
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Personal details

  • Professions: Actor, Writer, Director

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    • What is Ram Charan's birth name?

      Konidela Ram Charan