Ramayana: The Legend of Prince Rama backdrop
Ramayana: The Legend of Prince Rama

Ramayana: The Legend of Prince Rama

Has there ever been a story in which nature, God, man, and animals were so united in sorrow, fighting, and rejoicing together?

8.4 / 1019932h 15m

Synopsis

In Ayodhya, the royal palace of Kosala Kingdom in Ancient India, four princes were born to three queens, each of whom grew to great stature. Banished for 14 years due to court intrigue, Prince Rama retreated to the forest with his beautiful wife Sita. When Rama vanquishes the demons of the forest, he invites the wrath of the demon king Ravana, who kidnaps Sita. Based on the Indian epic the Ramayana.

Genre: Animation, Action, Adventure, Fantasy

Status: Released

Director: Y没g么 Sak么

Website: https://ramayana-anime.net/

Main Cast

Nikhil Kapoor

Rama (Voice)

Raell Padamsee

Sita (Voice)

Uday Mathan

Raavana (voice)

Mishal Verma

Lakshman (voice) (English)

Noel Godin

Hanuman (Voice) (English)

Denzil Smith

Denzil Smith

Sugreeva (voice) (English)

Rahul Bose

Rahul Bose

Bharatha (voice) (English)

Bulbul Mukherjee

Dasharatha (voice) (English)

Madhulika Varma

Kaikeyi (voice) (English)

Pearl Padamsee

Pearl Padamsee

Manthara (voice) (English)

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

The evil king Ravana has his heart set on the kingdom of Ayodhya and his opportunity to sow the seeds of mayhem comes when he manages to kidnap the beloved wife of the recently manipulated and exiled prince "Ram". Distraught, he and his brother "Lakshman" determine to rescue her and what now ensues is a wonderfully executed animated adventured packed with myth and legend, mystical monsters, swash and buckle, romance, tragedy, politics - indeed just about everything that you'd expect from an Indian epic (with quite a lot of stunning Japanese creative investment). The style of the drawing is not especially detailed, but it is vivid, colourful and flows perfectly from scenes of isolation and intensity to the grand battle scenarios and a flying chariot (that reminded me a little of the "Thief of Bagdad" from 1940). The story itself is the stuff to make Machiavelli blush - intrigues, betrayal and treachery all feature as "Ram" has to thwart the evil ambitions of his nemeses - and the powerful "Ravana" isn't his only one of these! The score has a slightly classical style to it that works well with rich string arrangements assisting the artwork to do a fair degree of the heavy lifting and helping keep the dialogue from rambling. It's 2录 hours long, but it flew by in an exciting and enjoyable fashion that illustrated the depth and richness of a culture that has legend a-plenty to enthral and entertain.