A closed-casket cremation. Raghu watches from a distant mosque minaret, shaving his head with a cheap razor. His wife, MEERA , doesn’t cry. She knows the body is a junkie they paid 20 lakhs. She clutches their son’s hand. Raghu turns away, dropping his gold chain into a gutter. He is now nobody . Part 2: The Wandering (Varanasi to the Himalayas) Scene 3: The Ghat of False Peace (Varanasi) Raghu, now in ochre robes and calling himself Ananda , begs for food. A local don recognizes his tattoo —a small sun behind his ear. That night, three men drag him into an alley. “Raghu bhai… you owe money.” Ananda doesn’t fight. He recites a prayer. The men beat him, but he just smiles, blood dripping. One assassin hesitates: “He’s crazy. Or holy.” They leave him for dead. Ananda realizes: renunciation doesn’t erase enemies; it just removes your armor.
Kavya calls Lala. “He’s a monk. He won’t fight back.” Lala laughs. “Then we’ll kill everyone around him until he does.” That night, the ashram is attacked. Two young monks are shot. Guruji is kidnapped. Part 4: The Return of Raghu Scene 7: The Shedding of the Robe (The Transformation) Ananda stands before a cracked mirror in a destroyed hut. He looks at the ochre robe. He looks at a rusty khukri (knife) on the wall. Flash-cuts: meditating hands / strangling a man. Chanting / screaming. He takes off the robe. Underneath, his old scars are still there. He wraps a black bandana around his head. He is not a monk. He is not a gangster. He is Anagarigam — a man with no home, no law, and nothing left to lose. anagarigam movie scenes
A long, unbroken shot (7 minutes). Ananda infiltrates Lala’s mountain fortress disguised as a corpse on a funeral pyre. He rises from the flames (practical fire, minimal CGI). One by one, he dismantles Lala’s guards—not with gunfire, but with the brutal efficiency of a man who has spent a year learning how to be invisible . He uses a prayer bell as a garrote. A trishul as a spear. He reaches Lala’s room. A closed-casket cremation
“Anagarigam: One who has no fixed abode. Not because they are lost. But because home is no longer a place.” Themes: False renunciation, the violence of peace, karma as action (not belief), and the idea that true freedom is terrifying because it offers no identity to hide behind. She knows the body is a junkie they paid 20 lakhs