Delhi Safari

Delhi Safari

Flop / DisasterComputer Animated
Director
Nikkhil Advani
Studio
Fantastic Films InternationalKrayon Pictures
Release Date
18 October 2012
Running Time
92 min
Language
Hindi
Country
India
Budget
12.00 Cr
Box Office
3.40 Cr

Cast

Review

5/10Critic Score

Rajiv Chilaka's "Delhi Safari" arrives with genuine environmental intentions, attempting to wrap an important message about human-animal coexistence within a child-friendly animated package. The film's central premise—animals seeking dialogue with humans rather than resorting to revenge—carries real moral weight, and this pacifist philosophy deserves appreciation in an industry that often defaults to simpler conflict resolutions. The character of Yuvi, a young elephant grieving his father's senseless death, is conceived with emotional sincerity, and the voice performances manage moments of touching vulnerability amidst the chaos.

However, the execution falters considerably in its second and third acts, where the narrative loses focus and descends into a scattered, tonally confused mess. The animation quality, while serviceable, lacks the polish and visual ingenuity expected even from mid-budget Indian animation films. More critically, what begins as a poignant tragedy—Sultan's death is genuinely upsetting—gets diluted by comedic interludes that feel tonally inappropriate and characters whose motivations shift without proper grounding. The script's ambitious reach exceeds its grasp; the animal parliament concept and the journey to Delhi feel undercooked, with dialogue that oscillates awkwardly between juvenile and preachy.

Chilaka clearly cares about his material, and that earnestness shines through even when the film stumbles. The film's heart lies in the right place—enviro

Vikram Bose, Bollyhits ↗

Storyline

So basically, this movie starts with this young elephant named Yuvi who's just lost his dad, Sultan, in this really tragic way. You see, Sultan and Yuvi were hanging out in the forest when suddenly bulldozers show up out of nowhere and start destroying everything around them. While trying to save his son, Sultan gets killed by a hunter, and poor Yuvi is left devastated and traumatized by what humans have done to his family and home.

After Sultan's death, all the animals in the forest are absolutely furious at humans and want revenge. There's this group of them having a meeting to figure out what to do next—some think they should just abandon their homes and leave, but this confident monkey named Bajrangi wants to fight back with his crew. However, another animal suggests that maybe talking to humans instead of fighting them could actually work better, which sounds pretty revolutionary for an angry bunch of animals.

This is where things get interesting because a white bird named Hawa Hawaai claims to know someone who can actually communicate in both animal and human languages. Yuvi ends up meeting this bird and is eager to find out who this mysterious translator is, which kicks off this whole adventure where the animals are hoping to solve their problem by actually understanding and talking to people instead of just being enemies.

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