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Vaazha 2 Review

Vaazha 2 Review
Published at:
Director: Savin S
Producer: Sahu Garapati and others
Release Date: Fri 24th Apr 2026
Actors: Hashir, Alan, Vinayak, Ajin, Biju Kuttan, Alphonse Puthren, Vijay Babu, Aju Varghese Ameen, Angel Maria and others
 
Vaazha II: Biopic of a Billion Bros Movie Rating: 2.75 / 5
Punchline: Vaazha II: Biopic of a Billion Bros - Enjoyable Bro !
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Vaazha II: Biopic of a Billion Bros (2026) - What's Behind

Malayalam Vaazha II: Biopic of A Billion Bros turned out to be a hit in 2024. The makers came up with the sequel recently titled  Vaazha II: Biopic Of A Billion Bros and it also followed the same pattern releasing in April. Now the film's Telugu version is releasing on 24 April 2026. Let us see what impact is creates on Telugu movie lovers.

Vaazha 2: Biopic of a Billion Bros (2026) - Story Review

Vaazha 2 story revolves around four friends who are branded as failures and their journey and how they deal with the immense social pressure to self discover themelves. Hashir (Hashir H), Alan (Alan Bin Siraj), Ajin (Ajin Joy) and Vinayak (Vinayak) after few altercations and fights become best friends.

Even as they enjoy their life to the core, they are branded as useless by the people around them and the society though they believe that 'They are not useless, They aren't used'. How they deal with them and where they head from there and what role their parents play form the interesting part of the narration.

Vaazha 2: Biopic of a Billion Bros - Artists Review

All the actors are new to Telugu viewers. But all of them came up with energetic and lively performances. They are not only natural and realistic but also didnot try to dominate eachother. Hashir, Alan, Vinayak, Ajin, Biju Kuttan, Alphonse Puthren, Vijay Babu, Aju Varghese Ameen, Angel Maria and others should be commended for their perfomrances.

Vaazha 2 (2026) - Technicians Review

The story of Vaazha 2 is penned by Vipin Das who directed the original and SA. Savin made his debut as the director. Savin on his debut continued from where Vaazha ends and followed the same template. The entire first half is filled with the scenes involving the friends in their childhood and school experiences and he managed to keep viewers engaged. Most of the hilarious scenes worked out making viewers smile and with the writing in its place, the screenplay and narration moves at a brisk pace.

But one gets a feeling that it is like Insta Reels coming from one after the another just like in the first part. The performances of the actors make the proceedings lively and largely entertaining. Everything looks natural, realistic and relatable. The conflicts shown looks similar to the one shown in the  first part. But they are elevated to some extent and at times they turned artificial. This is where the film differed with regards to the first part where everything looked natural.

While the director has taken due care in including numerous entertaining scenes, he failed to do the same to connect chords emotionally compared to the first part. Except for the father son emotions, nothing looks realistic. Thile the first half showed the happenings in the lives of the friend in Kerala, the second half takes the story forward with the friends reaching overseas. Their overseas struggles are seen in a emotional and natural manner. But at times, while highlighting the language barrier they went overboard and in some scenes turned insensitive.

The writing of Vipin  Das is casual, realistic and grounded and at the same time sharp and witty. The first half is filled with out and out humour while the second half takes an emotional turn. While he showed his understanding of male friendship quite well, he failed to do the same with the female friends and he confined them to supporting characters. At times, the dialogues turned preachy and this turned the second half sluggish.

Akhil Lailasuran's cinematography is colorful and appealing on the screen. The music is good but it is not upto the mark comparted to the first part. Among all the songs, only one song appeals to all. The background score is ok but at times turned out to be loud. Editing could have been better especially in the second half. Production values are grand.

Vaazha 2 - Advantages

  • Performances
  • Entertaining Elements

Vaazha 2 - Disadvantages

  • Missing Emotions
  • Preachy Scenes

Vaazha 2: Biopic of a Billion Bros - Rating Analysis

Altogether, Vaazha 2 is entertaining and emotional drama. Vipin Das continued from where he left in Vaazha and came up with entertaing story with emotional and message oriented touch and director SA.Savin on debut did a decent job. Performances are excellent and screenplay is quite tight.

But compared to the first part, to Vaazha: Biopic of a Billion Boys , Vaazha II: Biopic of a Billion Bros misses a lot and hits a few. Seen as a seperate entity viewers will enjoy the film thoroughly. If they compare it with the first part, they will be slightly disappointed. A little finetuning of the script, doing away with preachy dialogues and over the top scenes, Things would have been more effective and engaging. Considering all these elements, Cinejosh goes with a 2.75 rating for Vaazha 2.

 
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