Memu Cop’ulam Review (2026) – Godavari Village Mayhem, Two Incompetent Cops, One Missing Rooster

Memu Cop'ulam Review

Memu Cop’ulam is a six-episode Telugu rural comedy-mystery series streaming now on Zee5, directed by Pradeep Maddali and produced by BVS Ravi and Kaumudi K. Nemani under RAW Entertainments. The series stars Naga Babu Konidela, Getup Srinu, and Ravi Teja Nannimala in the lead roles, with the story written by Shoban Chittuprolu. Set in the Godavari districts during Sankranti, it follows two overconfident but thoroughly incompetent police officers who land their first significant case in a village buzzing with festival energy. The result is a warm, colourful, and genuinely entertaining Zee5 original that delivers exactly what its premise promises and occasionally exceeds it.

DetailInfo
Series NameMemu Cop’ulam
LanguageTelugu
PlatformZee5
Streaming FromMay 22, 2026
Episodes6
GenreRural Comedy Mystery
DirectorPradeep Maddali
StoryShoban Chittuprolu
CastNaga Babu Konidela, Getup Srinu, Ravi Teja Nannimala, Reethu Chowdary, Charan Lakkaraju, Jaffar, Sanghavi
CinematographyKishore Boyidapu
Background ScoreSaket Komanduri
ProductionRAW Entertainments in association with Pradeep Maddali Creative
ProducersBVS Ravi, Kaumudi K. Nemani
Our Rating6.5 / 10

Is Memu Cop’ulam Worth Watching?

Yes, particularly if you enjoy rooted Telugu rural storytelling with a comedy-first sensibility. It is a comfortable, well-paced six-episode watch that does not overstay its welcome and delivers genuine laughs across multiple stretches. Naga Babu as the village elder, Getup Srinu as the bumbling SI, and the Konaseema backdrop all work together to create something warm and specifically Telugu in a way that larger-budget urban crime dramas rarely manage. Stream it over a weekend without guilt.

What Is Memu Cop’ulam About?

Gajapati Raju, played by Naga Babu Konidela, is the most respected elder in a lively Godavari village. His status in the community rests on many things, but none more than his prized rooster, Salar Raju, who is the reigning champion of the Sankranti cockfights that the village lives for. When Salar Raju goes missing during the height of the Sankranti celebrations, it is not a small domestic inconvenience. It is a crisis of village honour.

SI Ravi Sotari (Getup Srinu) and Constable Mohan Sotari (Ravi Teja Nannimala) take up the case with a confidence that their abilities do not support. They immediately suspect rival groups, chase irrelevant leads, create spectacular confusion, and manage to stumble their way through a series of discoveries that reveal not just the fate of the rooster but a layer of thefts, illegal activities, and hidden village tensions that nobody expected a missing bird to expose.

Alongside the mystery, a love story between Sanghavi and Akash Reddy runs through the series, adding a lighter romantic thread that gives the narrative breathing room between the comic investigation sequences.

What Works

The world-building in the opening episodes is exceptional for a Telugu OTT series. Pradeep Maddali takes real time in the first episode to establish the village, its rhythms, its hierarchies, and why a rooster matters enough to set a police investigation in motion. That patience pays dividends across all six episodes, because every comic situation that follows is rooted in a world that feels genuinely inhabited.

Getup Srinu as SI Ravi Sotari is the comic engine the series runs on. His combination of misplaced swagger and complete incompetence is the archetype the character requires, and Getup Srinu executes it with the kind of internal logic that makes even his most absurd moments feel character-consistent. The scenes where he interrogates villagers, convinced he has identified a suspect and completely wrong about everything, are the series’ funniest stretches.

Naga Babu Konidela as Gajapati Raju grounds the comedy in real emotional weight. His performance as a village elder whose pride is tied to a rooster could have been one-note. Instead, he plays it with enough dignity and gentle self-awareness that the comedy around his distress actually earns its laughs. His return to Zee5 after Paruvu was clearly a deliberate creative choice, and the material rewards that choice.

Kishore Boyidapu’s cinematography captures Konaseema beautifully. The canal waters, the paddy fields, the colour and noise of Sankranti, all of it is photographed with genuine affection for the setting. The series looks better than most Telugu OTT productions of this scale.

The mystery has enough layers to stay interesting across six episodes. The rooster’s disappearance connects to larger village tensions in ways the first episode does not signal clearly, and the reveal in the later episodes is satisfying without being twist-dependent. It is the kind of mystery where, in retrospect, the clues were always there.

The title reveal video going viral was earned. The promotional video featuring Getup Srinu and Jaffar that went viral across platforms delivered exactly the tone the series maintains throughout. That is good marketing alignment with actual content.

What Does Not Work

The romantic subplot is the series’ weakest thread. The love story between Sanghavi and Akash Reddy is pleasant enough to not be a problem, but it does not carry the same energy or specificity as the comedy-mystery main plot. In a six-episode series, it occupies more space than it earns.

Some supporting performances are thinner than the ensemble’s core. Ravi Teja Nannimala as Constable Mohan Sotari has moments of good comic timing but does not have the same presence as Getup Srinu. The imbalance means the duo’s scenes together are sometimes carried by one performer rather than two.

The series does not attempt anything particularly ambitious beyond its premise. Memu Cop’ulam is a very well-executed version of a small idea. It does not pretend to be otherwise, and for six episodes that is entirely valid. But it does mean the series has a low ceiling for what it can achieve critically.

Performances

Naga Babu Konidela (Wikipedia) returns to Zee5 after his well-received work in Paruvu and brings the same naturalistic warmth to this very different kind of character. His Gajapati Raju is a man who takes his village standing seriously and takes his rooster even more seriously, and Naga Babu plays both of those commitments with complete sincerity.

Getup Srinu (Wikipedia) is the series’ MVP. His SI Ravi Sotari is the kind of role his career has been building toward: a lead character built entirely on comic incompetence, given enough screen time and consistency to become genuinely likeable rather than just funny.

Ravi Teja Nannimala as the constable is reliable in a supporting capacity. Jaffar, who helped unveil the title in the promotional video, appears in the series itself and adds to the village’s comic texture. Charan Lakkaraju and Reethu Chowdary handle the romantic subplot with warmth if not distinction.

Direction and Technical Elements

Pradeep Maddali’s direction is most impressive in how he establishes and maintains tonal consistency across six episodes. Vikkatakavi showed his ability to work in the intersection of rural settings and specific character comedy, and Memu Cop’ulam confirms and extends that ability. His scene construction in the interrogation sequences and the village group sequences is where his instincts are sharpest.

Shoban Chittuprolu’s story provides the series with a solid foundation. The decision to anchor the mystery in a culturally specific object (the cockfight-champion rooster during Sankranti) rather than a generic crime gives the show its distinctive identity.

Saket Komanduri’s background score supports the mood without ever becoming intrusive or heavy-handed. The technical package overall is well above the average for Telugu OTT originals of comparable scale.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Memu Cop’ulam worth watching on Zee5?
Yes. A warm, funny six-episode rural comedy-mystery that delivers on its premise. Watch it over a weekend without overthinking it.

What does Memu Cop’ulam mean?
The title translates loosely to “We are the police.” It is a playful, slightly ironic title given how incompetent the two officers at the centre of the story turn out to be.

How many episodes does Memu Cop’ulam have?
Six episodes, streaming now on Zee5.

Who plays the lead roles in Memu Cop’ulam?
Naga Babu Konidela plays Gajapati Raju, the village elder whose rooster goes missing. Getup Srinu plays SI Ravi Sotari, the overconfident investigating officer. Ravi Teja Nannimala plays his constable Mohan Sotari.

Who directed Memu Cop’ulam?
Pradeep Maddali, known for Vikkatakavi, directs the series. The story is written by Shoban Chittuprolu.

Is Memu Cop’ulam only in Telugu?
Yes. It is a Telugu original produced for Zee5 by RAW Entertainments.

Final Verdict

CinemaCelebs Rating: 6.5 / 10

Memu Cop’ulam is a confident, warm, and consistently entertaining addition to Zee5’s Telugu original catalogue. Its greatest strength is its specificity: a Godavari village, a Sankranti cockfight, and two police officers who have no business investigating anything. Pradeep Maddali builds that world carefully and lets Getup Srinu and Naga Babu loose in it with excellent results. The romantic subplot underwhelms and the series never aims above its comfortable ceiling, but for six well-paced episodes of rooted Telugu rural comedy, it is a very satisfying watch.

Binge it if: You enjoy Godavari-set Telugu stories with strong local flavour, ensemble comedy, and a mystery that holds up across its runtime.

Skip it if: You need higher dramatic stakes, stronger romance, or a series that takes creative risks.

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