Namma+annayya+kannada+full+fixed+movie New! · Extended
Note on "Fixed": In Kannada cinema slang, "fixed" implies a film with a clear, linear narrative, standard commercial elements (fight, sentiment, romance, comedy), and a definitive ending—unlike experimental or art-house films.
Core Plot Summary The story revolves around Shankaranna (Vishnuvardhan), a fierce, righteous village chief who upholds justice with an iron fist. His look-alike is Anand (also Vishnuvardhan), a fun-loving, city-bred engineer. When enemies trick the village by bringing Anand to destroy Shankaranna's reputation, a classic tale of mistaken identity, brotherly love, and revenge unfolds.
Detailed Story (Act by Act) Act 1: The Iron Fist of the Village Location: Ramagiri Village, Karnataka Shankaranna is the undisputed leader of Ramagiri. He is a landlord-cum- protector —feared by wrongdoers, loved by the poor. He carries a distinctive silver-handled whip (not a sword), which he uses to punish thieves, casteists, and corrupt officials. Key Scene: When a local moneylender tries to evict a poor widow, Shankaranna ties the moneylender to a tree and publicly flogs him. The villagers chant "Namma Annayya... Namma Annayya" (Our Brother). The Antagonist: Doddanna (played by K. S. Ashwath), a sly, wealthy landlord. He believes Shankaranna's power overshadows his own. He wants control over the village temple's land. Shankaranna refuses. Doddanna swears revenge. Act 2: The City Look-alike Location: Bangalore We meet Anand , Shankaranna's exact double. Anand is an easygoing civil engineer. He wears sunglasses, rides a scooter, and is in love with Priya (played by Anu Prabhakar ), a modern girl who runs a boutique. Anand and Priya have a lighthearted romance—songs in coffee shops, teasing about his "villager face." Anand is innocent, trusting, and a bit of a coward. Comic Track: Two bumbling thieves mistake Anand for Shankaranna and try to surrender to him. Chaos ensues. Act 3: The Conspiracy Doddanna learns of Anand's existence through a photograph. He hatches a plan:
Send Anand to Ramagiri disguised as Shankaranna. Have Anand behave foolishly (dance to film songs, disrespect elders, sign false property documents) to destroy Shankaranna's reputation. On the final day, have Shankaranna arrested for forgery (using Anand's signatures on fake deeds). namma+annayya+kannada+full+fixed+movie
Doddanna's henchmen kidnap Anand's friend, blackmail Anand into going to Ramagiri and pretending to be Shankaranna for "just two days." Act 4: The Switch Anand arrives in Ramagiri. The villagers welcome "Shankaranna" with grand aarti . Anand struggles:
He tries to use his engineering skills (calculating water flow) instead of brute force. When a man asks for justice, Anand offers to "file a municipal complaint," confusing everyone. He attempts to dance at a temple festival (hilarious scene) and inadvertently kicks the temple priest.
Meanwhile, the real Shankaranna—who had gone to the city to buy seeds—returns. He finds his doppelgänger sleeping in his bed. Shankaranna is furious. Pivotal Scene: Shankaranna confronts Anand at midnight. Anand explains everything, crying and showing his kidnapped friend's photo. Shankaranna sees Anand is not evil—just a pawn. Instead of killing him, Shankaranna smiles. "You are my younger brother now," he says. The first emotional high of the film. Act 5: Reverse Trap Shankaranna's Plan: He and Anand will swap identities publicly. When enemies trick the village by bringing Anand
Anand will continue acting "weak" to lure Doddanna into full action. Shankaranna will pretend to be "City Anand" in Bangalore.
Comedy sequence: Shankaranna in Bangalore—trying to use a coffee vending machine, breaking a revolving door, and scaring Priya's modern friends with his rural directness. Priya is confused but charmed. Act 6: Climax Back in Ramagiri, Doddanna stages a "public meeting." He produces forged documents "signed by Shankaranna" giving away all village land. The villagers are shocked—they believe their Annayya has betrayed them. Just as Doddanna declares victory, Shankaranna enters in Anand's city clothes. He tears the documents, whips the henchmen, and—in a stunning fight sequence—defeats 20 men. Final Dual-Actor Scene: Shankaranna and Anand stand side by side. Anand reveals the truth: Shankaranna is innocent. Doddanna is arrested. The villagers cheer even louder—now two Annayyas. Act 7: Resolution
Anand marries Priya (with Shankaranna's blessing). Shankaranna remains the village chief but now has a younger brother who brings technology (solar lights, water pumps) to the village. The final shot: Both brothers walk through the fields, arms around each other, as the title song plays: "Namma Annayya... prema ananyya..." He carries a distinctive silver-handled whip (not a
Key Themes & Highlights
Dual role contrast: Vishnuvardhan's performance is masterful—the stern, heavy-eyed Shankaranna vs. the light, expressive Anand. Whip as a weapon: Distinctive and iconic. Several fights are choreographed around it. No mother sentiment overuse: Unlike many 90s films, the emotion here is purely fraternal and justice-driven. Villain’s end: Doddanna doesn't die—he is publicly humiliated and handed over to the police, reinforcing Shankaranna's lawful nature despite his violence.