He is shut down by his brother Bosu when he tries to talk him into sharing his portion of wealth with other family members. Upon returning to the village, he is furious about being kept in the dark about property disputes, farm issues, etc. Following his father's death, Jagadish is also sent away to the city for further studies and is not informed of his niece's wedding. Bosu also insults Arjunamma and his half-siblings when they demand a share in the property, thereby outing them. He secretly makes a deal with Veerendra and gets his niece Chandra married to Veerendra's brother in exchange for a share in a windmill project coming up in the place of farms leased out to local farmers by Adisesha. Upon Adisesha's death from cardiac arrest, Bosu threatens the advocate and ensures to prepare the will giving him access to all the family assets rather than to his other siblings, contrary to what his father wished. On one such occasion, Veerendra's father is killed in a feud, and he develops hatred toward Adisesha's family. Bhudevipuram is notorious for its property disputes, which are usually solved by Adisesha Naidu. He also hates the thought that his father has a soft corner for his girl children. Bosu, however, secretly dislikes the other family members as he believes he is the only rightful inheritor of his father's wealth as the first son. Jagdish loves his stepmother and treats her as his own and also ideal brother to all his sisters. Following Tulsamma's death, while giving birth to Jagadish, Arjunamma takes Bosu and Jagadish with her as her own children, and all the children are brought up together as a joint family. Tulasamma brings fortune to the family, through which Adisesha becomes rich. He has two sons with his first wife Tulsamma (Bosu and Jagadish) and two daughters and a son with his second wife Arjunamma (Ganga, Kumari, and Bujji who is mute). Plot Īdisesha Naidu is the headman of Bhudevipuram village. The film premiered on 10 September 2021 with the festival of Vinayaka Chaviti and received mixed to negative reviews from the critics. The theatrical release of this film was deferred multiple times due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulting the producers to opt for direct-to-streaming release on Amazon Prime Video.
The film has cinematography by Prasad Murella and editing by Prawin Pudi. The film features soundtrack composed by Thaman S and background music scored by Gopi Sundar. Filming, though briefly halted by the COVID-19 pandemic, was completed in December 2020. The film was announced in December 2019 with principal photography taking place in Pollachi and Palani of Tamil Nadu, and Rajahmundry of Andhra Pradesh. In the film, a revenue officer tries to reform all the property issues in the village while also planning to reunite with his elder brother's family after a dispute over inheritance. The film stars Nani as the title role, alongside Ritu Varma, Aishwarya Rajesh, and Jagapathi Babu. And what's with Aishwarya Rajesh getting almost the exact same role that she got in Namma Veetu Pillai? Lol, she too can seriously use her talents else where.Tuck Jagadish is a 2021 Indian Telugu-language action family drama film, written and directed by Shiva Nirvana and produced by Sahu Garapati and Harish Peddi under the banner Shine Screens. Don't watch this unless you're just here to see Nani. The drama is also quite soap-ish and not at all subtle, needing to spell out everything for you. Nani, you can do waaay better than this emotional soap drama that doesn't even use you or your acting properly. He's much better at being natural and even though he does do fight scenes, in his better movies we always get to see him as a person, with his strengths and weaknesses. The worst part is the fact that they made Nani so overpowered. The early middle was a little promising with a not so obvious twist which could have been developed much better as it could have provided for a little subtlety and a way better denouement, and given the entire story a little suspense. The first act was okay, I guess? An all evil villain is set up (as usual) and we immediately establish that he's the bad guy by making him do 'bad things' (as usual).