NACVHAVULE MOVIE REVIEW



Cast: Tanish, Madhavilatha, Kasi Viswanath, Raksha
Cinematography: Sudhakar Reddy.
Music: Shekhar Chandra.
Producer: Ramoji Rao.
Story, Screenplay, Dialogues & Direction: Ravibabu.
Banner: Ushakiron Movies.
Release Date: 19th December, 2008.

Two cute puppies, one holding a rose have been on the posters all over the metro for the past few weeks. The director refused to give out details of the cast with an intention of creating hype and a result is a publicity blitzkrieg of 'Nacchavule' that is not too over-bearing. Well, the two puppies represent the blooming of puppy love to a more mature understanding. The hero seems to be a born Casanova, he winks at the nurse even when the nurse holds him as a new born baby.

ls but since none fall for him he decides to aim at only one girl. The girl (Madhavilatha)who is responsible, independent, focused finds herself falling hopelessly in love with him buying gifts and footing his bills.

The irresponsible Tanish dumps her and moves onto other girls only to realize he had put his love, his life in a jeopardy. Director Ravi Babu boldly floats on fresh characters and uses Satyanand's strong screenplay to convey more than one message. For sure, the movie doesn't hold anything new or path breaking script but you laugh and never get bored with those silly moments and try to relate with it. The entire first half is funny, engaging and breezes past but later on it is loaded with sentiment. The movie never goes overboard as it is told from a teenager viewpoint not from an adult perspective.

It is only when the damage is done, when he loses his girl, his mother dies , Tanish realizes the importance of relationships. The film focuses on two families. Tanish becomes a wayward youth despite all the lectures of discipline by his father and Madhavilatha misuses the liberty her father has given. Performance wise though both the lead are fresheners, they have given their best and ditto with Narasimha the hero's friend.

Kamesh as the heroine's father watches helplesslessly as his daughter asserts herself and justifies her decision and never once reprimands her when she is scandalized by the MMS.

On the other hand there is the same situation that Kasi Vishwanadh goes through but learns an important lesson in life and passes it on as a gospel to his son. The last scene in which Tanish's little brother revels when he is put in a hostel is a clear pointer that kids are kids. All in all the film reminds one of Uday Kiran's initial films and is likely to get patronage as the cast is fresh and have given commendable performance. It has good music and promises a plesant visual experience.
over all rating :3

No comments: