When a factionist visits their home for a bride-seeing ceremony, Darling finds a place in the hearts of the women by talking about how Richa will end up nursing a mutilated husband should he lose his limbs in an attempt on his life. Astonishingly, he even issues a fatwa to a local college principal to educate poor students who knock on his door. This head is so amazingly and completely converted that he even wants to marry off Richa to the guy even without knowing who his parents are. The bad father in the village is converted when a widowed mother appears before his house to thank him for the money with tears welling up in her eyes.
Two villains who wanted to burn a village are very easily converted and how? Subbu Raju is told by Darling that one must have a girl in life. If you look for novelty, Mirchi is sure to disappoint. What decision does Prabhas take at this point? What consequences will his message have for the villages? This triggers another bout of feudalism between the two families and very soon, the bewildered and disillusioned father disowns his son, whom he discovers to be a covert factionist. Forced by circumstances, Prabhas reveals his macabre self to the other side during his brief stint in the village. On a visit to his respected father, Prabhas realizes that for 20 years, despite talking peace, his father has been unable to convince the other side that hatred doesn't pay. She walks out of a domestic relationship with him, along with her 2-year-old kid, never to see him again.Īpproximately twenty years later, the unconventional woman reveals to her son the identity of her husband for no strong reason, least realizing that her tall, handsome son has the potential in him to take bloody feuds to another level. Unconvinced that her husband will be allowed to remain non-violent, her wife comes with a novel concept. After a bloody feud between the two families, X vows by ahimsa. X (Satya Raj), the peace-loving head of a virtuous family and a virtuous village, has a nastily violent enemy in Y (Nagineedu).
Quite unintendedly, the young protagonist who is at the centre of this Gandhian project happens to hypocritically participate in the finale by threatening to establish peace by sword, fiercely saying "None can wield the sword better than me." What a self-forgetful pacifist, for heaven's sake! It tells the message that true heroism lies in making peace with one's venom-spewing, blood-curdling enemy, thereby becoming the man with gutsy heart that every village which has been reeling under bloody battles badly needs. Mirchi is yet another film whose story is woven around a done-to-death theme of Telugu cinema.