Film: Mass Jathara
Director: Bhanu Bogavarapu
Cast: Ravi Teja, Sreeleela, Naveen Chandra, Rajendra Prasad, Naresh and others
Producers: Naga Vamsi, Sai Sowjanya
Music Director: Bheems Ceciroleo
Cinematographer: Vidhu Ayyanna
Editor: Naveen Nooli
Release Date : Nov 01, 2025
Rating
2/5
Mass Raja Ravi Teja’s milestone 75th film Mass Jathara teams him up once again with Sreeleela. Mass Jathara, directed by Bhanu Bhogavarapu and produced by Naga Vamsi under Sithara Entertainments, marks Ravi Teja’s 75th film. With Sreeleela as the female lead and music by Bheems Ceciroleo, let’s see how the film turns out.
Story:
Lakshman Bheri (Ravi Teja) is a sincere railway police officer in Warangal who lives with his grandfather (Rajendra Prasad). After clashing with a minister, he is transferred to a small village named Adavi Varam in Srikakulam district. There, a man named Shiva (Naveen Chandra) is illegally growing and selling ganja with the help of local farmers. Lakshman meets Tulasi (Sreeleela), a regular passenger, and falls in love. When Shiva’s ganja accidentally reaches Lakshman’s station, the officer hides it and takes matters into his own hands. Why did he hide it? What’s his real motive? How does he deal with Shiva? These questions unfold through the film’s action-packed narrative.
Performances:
Ravi Teja once again shines with his energetic performance, powerful dialogues, and dances. Sreeleela impresses in two shades of her role. Naveen Chandra fits well as the antagonist. Rajendra Prasad brings occasional laughs, while the supporting cast including Ajay Ghosh, Hyper Aadi, and Naresh add comic flavor. The rest of the cast made their presence felt.
Technical Aspects:
Technically, the cinematography is colorful and visually rich. However, Bheems Ceciroleo’s background score feels loud at times. Except for the song Tu Meri Lover, other tracks are average. Editing could have been tighter.
Review:
Mass Jathara follows a typical commercial formula with familiar elements—hero introduction, love track, villain fight, and emotional flashbacks. The film’s core revolves around a ganja racket but doesn’t explore the farmer angle deeply. Though the comedy works in parts, the story feels routine with predictable twists. Overall, Mass Jathara is an average mass entertainer that relies highly on Ravi Teja’s energy and screen presence. While it entertains his fans, it lacks freshness in story and execution. A bare one time watch for those who enjoy formula-driven action films.
Plus Points:
Performances
Few comedy scenes
Action sequences
Minus Points:
Routine Plot
Boring screenplay
Final Verdict: Not Mass But Missed Jathara



