Jigris Movie Review : A Loud Ride With More Noise Than Impact

A sharp and honest take on Jigris, a Telugu road trip film that promises fun but delivers a slow and uneven experience filled with weak writing and flat emotions.

Jigris Review

Movie Info

Movie Name: Jigris

Release Date: 14 November 2025

Platform or Theatre: Theatrical

Cast: Krishna Burugula, Ram Nithin, Dheeraj Athreya, Mani Vaka

Director: Harish Reddy Uppula

Producers or Banner: Krishna Vodapalli, Mount Meru Pictures

Music: Kamran

Cinematography: Eeswaraditya

Genre: Comedy, Drama, Road Trip

Runtime: 2 Hours 30 Minutes

Rating: 2/5

Introduction

Jigris tries to ride on friendship, chaos and the charm of a road trip. The idea sounds promising, but the execution rarely reaches the heart. Harish Reddy Uppula aims for youthful energy, but the film often loses control of its own tone. You walk in expecting a fun trip. You walk out wondering why it felt longer than it needed to be.

Story  Spoiler Free

The plot follows four old friends who decide to take one final trip together. On paper it should be emotional and lively. On screen it becomes a mix of predictable moments and forced humour. The journey has a few engaging stretches but much of it feels stretched and uneven. The emotional angle does not land with the weight it aims for because the writing keeps circling the same points without depth.

Performances

Krishna Burugula puts effort into the heavier scenes, but several moments feel overacted or too staged. Ram Nithin has good presence but the script does not give him enough to work with. Dheeraj Athreya tries to bring humour but many jokes fall flat. Mani Vaka has the most serious track yet even that lacks strong emotional payoff. As a group they look comfortable together, but the performances never rise above average.

Direction and Screenplay

Harish Reddy Uppula has a clear intention but the film struggles to maintain flow. The first half jumps between random events that feel stitched together. The second half slows down so much that the emotional beats lose impact. The writing leans on safe choices and avoids taking risks. Scenes meant to be touching feel familiar and predictable. The film often mistakes noise for energy.

Technical Aspects

The cinematography is decent but nothing memorable. Frames look bright but lack creativity. Music by Kamran tries to lift the film but only a couple of tracks make an impression. Editing could have been sharper. Several scenes drag on without purpose. Production values are fine but nothing stands out.

Highlights

What Works

The friendship theme has potential A few light moments land well One or two emotional scenes feel honest

What Does Not Work

Weak screenplay with little freshness Uneven pacing that tests patience Forced humour and predictable emotional beats

Emotional and Thematic Takeaway

Jigris wants to say something meaningful about friendships and growing up, but the message gets buried under slow scenes and familiar writing. The film does not offer much new insight or emotional depth. It aims to make you feel something strong, but most of it fades the moment you step out.

Verdict and Rating

Verdict: Jigris has a promising setup but loses direction quickly. It tries hard to be emotional and entertaining but ends up being an average trip with very few standout moments.

Bottom line: A long ride with small sparks and many flat turns.

Rating: 2 out of 5