Bahubali - 2 Full Film [verified]
The reign of terror ends.
Kattappa, his soul shattering, understood. She meant death . That night, in the prison cell, as Amarendra smiled and spoke of his son’s future, Kattappa raised his sword. One clean strike. The greatest warrior of Mahishmati fell, not by an enemy’s hand, but by the loyalty of his dearest friend. Back in the present, Mahendra has heard enough. Rage consumes him. He storms the gates of Mahishmati with Avantika (Tamannaah) and a rebel army. The final war is not a battle—it is a natural disaster. bahubali 2 full film
Believing her son a traitor, a heartbroken Sivagami looked at the loyal Kattappa and whispered the words: “Free him from his bonds.” The reign of terror ends
In the final scene, Mahendra stands before the statue of his father, the waterfall now flowing with the blood of their enemies washed clean. Kattappa kneels, offering his own life for his sin. Mahendra raises the sword… and then drops it. He embraces the old slave. That night, in the prison cell, as Amarendra
And so, the loyal slave begins his tale, not from the end, but from the glorious, tragic beginning. Years before, Amarendra Baahubali (Prabhas) was the beloved prince of Mahishmati. Unlike his brooding cousin Bhallaladeva (Rana Daggubati), Amarendra was a man of the people—humble, ferocious, and kind. Their queen mother, Sivagami (Ramya Krishnan), ruled as regent, having raised both boys as heirs, though her heart always leaned toward the more disciplined Bhalla.
He manipulated Queen Sivagami’s rigid sense of law. He whispered that Devasena was arrogant, disrespectful to the crown. The turning point came when a humble sculptor crafted a magnificent golden statue of Devasena. Bhalla’s men smashed it. Devasena, in her fury, took a hammer to a decorative emblem of Bhallaladeva. Sivagami saw this as treason. The queen, bound by her oath to the throne above all, banished Amarendra and Devasena from the palace. But Amarendra was no ordinary exile. He moved to a small village on the kingdom’s edge and, with the help of the loyal Kattappa, built a hidden utopia. He diverted a river to end a drought, created fertile farmland, and became a folk hero to the very people the palace ignored. He named this paradise after his mother.
“You did not kill my father,” Mahendra says. “You were a weapon. Bhallaladeva was the hand that wielded you.”