Dramatic story occurred in rural India. A poor man living in an agricultural village in rural India acquires his own money, providing water for farmland for a fee. The man lives in the lives of innocent people, but he encounters a bitter reality where he has to defend the life of a brother who opposes the president who ruled the village for 30 years.
The film is not just set in the 80s; it also picks a story template from that era and narrates in a refreshingly raw manner. Sukumar must be credited for fleshing out the characters well enough that they don't seem like caricatures of a bygone era.
Village politics, casteism, exploitation, oppression, rebellion and revenge form the crux of Rangasthalam. Run-of-the-mill stuff, you'd say. But what sets this film apart is its narration.