For decades, Hollywood has celebrated actors who completely transform themselves for a role. From Christian Bale’s dramatic physical reinventions to Hugh Jackman’s years of athletic conditioning as Wolverine, audiences have admired performers willing to push their bodies to serve a character. With Peddi, Ram Charan appears to have delivered a transformation that belongs in the same conversation about commitment and immersion.
What makes the performance particularly unique is the sheer range demanded from a single character. Unlike many sports films that revolve around one discipline, Peddi moves through the worlds of cricket, sprinting, and traditional wrestling. The actor’s look evolves accordingly: from the long-haired cricketer with a nose ring to the powerful bare-bodied pehalwan and later another distinct phase in the character’s journey. Few mainstream stars attempt so many physical identities within one film.
The wrestling portions especially draw comparisons with transformations undertaken by actors like Tom Hardy for combat-driven roles. From Ram Charan, the sheer physical range demanded 16 months of cricket drills, wrestling conditioning, sprint training, traditional akhada workouts, functional strength work, and body transformations designed specifically around realism. The process also involved periods of calorie deficit to maintain a leaner athletic frame before gradually building a broader, wrestler-like physique with heavy shoulders, chest, and grounded physicality.
Yet what ultimately separates the transformation is its cultural rootedness. While Hollywood examples often draw from boxing, MMA, or superhero mythology, Peddi grounds its hero in rural Andhra Pradesh, kushti traditions, and grassroots athleticism. The result is a transformation that feels global in ambition but Indian in spirit – making it one of the most memorable character reinventions of Ram Charan’s career.
