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In Car Movie Review,In Car Review, Ritika Singh In Car Movie Review

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In Car Movie Review,In Car Review, Ritika Singh In Car Movie Review

In Automotive is a Telugu dubbed survival thriller movie directed by Harsh Warrdhan. The movie has Ritika Singh taking part in the lead function whereas Sandeep Goyat, Manish Jhanjholia, Sunil Soni, Gyan Prakash & others are seen taking part in key roles. The music consists by Mathias Duplessy and the movie is produced by Anjum Qureshi & Sajid Qureshi Reddy below Inbox Photos banner.

Story:

The movie is a few younger lady’s terrifying journey of survival and the plot is about majorly in a automotive. A younger college-going lady (Rithika Singh) is kidnapped by some miscreants. They hit her badly and plan to rape her in an remoted location. She seems for each likelihood to run off from them. However all her efforts go in useless. When she is left with no different choice, she decides to struggle again. Will she win the battle & escape? What occurs later must be seen within the movie.

What about on-screen performances?

Rithika Singh does a commendable efficiency because the sufferer. She must be appreciated for accepting a difficult function like this and it’s absolutely a courageous try from the younger actress. She is especially very good within the pre-climax parts.

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Manish Jhanjholia is the choose of the actors from the remainder of the forged. His physique language is apt and he does a superb job because the vindictive rapist.

Sandeep Goyat and Sunil Soni are fairly first rate as the opposite two culprits.

Gyan Prakash is nice because the automotive driver whereas the remainder of the forged are okay of their restricted elements.

What about off-screen abilities?

The story by Harsh Warrdhan has nothing out of the field apart from many of the plot taking place inside a automotive. Although it’s a courageous try, the core plot may be very routine.

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The screenplay is the largest disadvantage of the movie. For a survival movie like this, the screenplay needs to be racy and must have first rate thrills however the makers fail in including these facets.

Director Harsh Warrdhan does a great job together with his presentation however his narrative is one other huge wrongdoer. The slow-paced storytelling doesn’t work and the narrative by no means retains us engaged. There are numerous logics that go for a toss and the lengthy conversations in between a severe crime makes it look uninteresting. After some extent, we cease sympathizing with the principle character resulting from these undesirable conversations.

The Telugu dialogues are high-quality and the Telugu dubbing seems off-track at a couple of locations.

The digital camera work by Mithun Gangopadhyay is the largest asset of the movie. The framing contained in the automotive is completely carried out and particularly the lengthy drone pictures are splendid on huge screens.

The music by Mathias Duplessy is ok whereas the edit by Manik Dawar wanted to be crisper.

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The manufacturing values by Inbox Photos are good.

What’s Scorching?

  • Rithika Singh’s Efficiency
  • Manish Jhanjholia’s Efficiency
  • Sensible Cinematography
  • Climax

What’s Not?

  • Poor Screenplay
  • Lacks Thrills
  • Logicless Scenes
  • Flat First 20 Minutes
  • Boring Conversations

Verdict: On the entire, In Automotive is a pale survival thriller that solely retains us engaged on the ending parts. Other than Rithika Singh’s courageous act, there’s nothing a lot to crave about on this movie.

Telugubulletin.com Score: 1.5/5

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Movie Reviews

Prasanna Vadanam Movie Review – Gulte

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Prasanna Vadanam Movie Review – Gulte

2.75/5


2 Hr 26 Mins   |   Thriller   |   03-05-2024


Cast – Suhas, Payal Radhakrishna, Rashi Singh, Viva Harsha, Nitin Prasanna and others

Director – Arjun Y K

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Producer – Manikanta J S, Prasad Reddy T R

Banner – Arha Media, Little Thoughts Cinemas

Music – Vijai Bulganin

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Suhas has become one of the bankable actors in Tollywood. He is now out with his latest film, Prasanna Vadanam, based on a man with face blindness. Directed by Arjun YK, let’s review the film here.

Plot

Surya(Suhas), a Radio RJ meets with a terrible accident and ends up with a rare disease named Prosopagnosia. Due to this, he gets face blindness and cannot identify the faces of people around him. One fine day, he witnesses the brutal murder of a young girl. He informs the cops but instead gets embroiled in the case. Left with no choice; he approaches top cop Vaidehi(Rashi Singh) for assistance. But things turn on its head and multiple cases are now filed on Surya. The rest of the story is about how Surya proves his innocence with the help of his girlfriend Adhya(Payal Radhakrishna).

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Performances

Suhas is known for his versatile characters gets a tailor-made role in Prasanna Vadanam. As he has a unique disease, the scope for him to perform uniquely is high in the film, and Suhas lives up to all the expectations. His performance in the second half is highly impressive and arrests you till the end. Nithin Prasanna, who was last seen in Ambajipeta Marriage Band, delivers yet another bankable performance. The various shades he showcased in his performance were impressive. Rashi Singh, who played the top cop, was decent, but she should have worked more on the expressions in the latter part of the film. Viva Harsha was okay, and so was Payal Radhakrishna.

Technicalities

Vijay Bulganin composed the music for the film, and his songs are quite ordinary. None of the songs register with the audience, but the background score is quite impressive. The sound design neatly elevates the proceedings and is composed in a stylish manner. The camera work is so-so and one cannot complain keeping the budget in mind. The production values are also okay, and there is nothing much to rave about. The editing is perfect as the narrative is crisp and to the point.

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Suhas
Interval twist

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Lag in the second half
Songs
Flashback

Analysis

Making thrillers is one of the biggest tasks for any writer-director. But newcomer Arjun YK has chosen a story with face blindness which is something new for Telugu cinema. So, this itself makes things interesting for Prasanna Vadanam. Prasanna Vadanam starts on a very interesting note, and the best part is that director Arjun does not waste any time entering the conflict point in the film.

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Once the heroine is introduced, the love track gets a bit boring, but that too passes, and things become interesting for the audience. Once the crime is committed, the concentration shifts towards the cops and how they will deal with the case. But the way director Arjun brings in the half-time twist is superb and unexpected. As the director reveals the man behind the murder, things become a bit difficult for the director to handle the proceedings.

This is when the proceedings become slow and a bit dull. Also, the reason behind the motive of the murderer is not showcased convincingly. Also, the way Suhas behaves in the second half looks a bit odd. As he has face blindness, the director could have added more drama and played with the effects, but that does not happen, and things move slowly until the pre-climax.

Director Arjun has potential and narrates the film well for the most part. However, way too many cinematic liberties and a lack of hold on emotions are some of the drawbacks. Prasanna Vadanam has decent moments that hold your attention. However, one needs to prepare for the pace and lack of depth in the proceedings as well.

Bottom Line – Passable Thriller

Rating: 2.75/5

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Sabari Movie Review: Varalaxmi Proves She Can Do Female Centric Roles

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Sabari Movie Review: Varalaxmi Proves She Can Do Female Centric Roles

Sabari, starring Varalaxmi Sarathkumar and directed by Anil Katz. The film hit theatres today.

What is it about?

The film follows Sanjana (Varalaxmi Sarathkumar), a single mother whose world is turned upside down when a horrifying truth comes to light: the child she raised is not her biological daughter.

Plot:

The story begins with a twisted past, revealing a villain, Mime Gopi, who escaped a mental asylum with an obsession—finding the daughter he believes was swapped. This sets him on a violent collision course with Sanjana, who will stop at nothing to protect the child she has loved and raised as her own.

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Sabari showcases the unwavering bond between a mother and child. As a single parent navigating the challenges of a broken marriage, Sanjana embodies strength and determination.

The movie appears like a psychological horror- thriller at first. While watching the first half, the film comes across a female led emotional thriller where the single parent appears to be going through hardships. Everything goes for a toss in the second half. It is in the second half that the film becomes an irreparable mess. The plot turns are created or arranged in a way that seems unrealistic and artificial.

Verdict: The screenplay of Sabari is far-fetched and the climax is so old that you will not believe this is a film made in 2024. However, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar has delivered a terrific performance.

Rating: 2.75/5

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review: The Fall Guy – CinemaNerdz

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Movie Review: The Fall Guy – CinemaNerdz

Based on the television show of the same name that ran for five seasons from 1981-86 and starred Lee Majors and Heather Thomas, director David Leitch’s new film, The Fall Guy, employs the same combination of action and sexual tension that fueled the show (albeit not necessarily between the two main characters). This approach makes for an entertaining and somewhat nostalgic aura around a film that, if approached a different way, could have resulted in another disappointing cinematic adaptation of a popular television property.

Colt Seavers (Ryan Gosling) is a stuntman at the top of his game. He is performing death-defying stunts alongside his wannabe director girlfriend Jody (Emily Blunt) until one stunt goes awry and a severely injured Colt all but retires from the profession. That is, until his services are requested on the film that his now ex-girlfriend Jody is making her directorial debut with. The prospect of making peace with her entices him to take up the mantle of stuntman again. When he gets on set however, he quickly learns that there is more to his emerging from retirement than simply performing a few stunts as the star of Jody’s film (played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson) has disappeared and the film’s producer Gail Meyer (Hannah Waddingham) enlists Colt to track him down and bring him back to set. Of course, this is easier said than done and Colt soon finds himself embroiled in a conspiracy that could derail not only his reconciliation with Jody, but her career as well.

"The Fall Guy" poster

Like he has done with films like Bullet Train (2022) and Deadpool 2 (2018), director David Leitch shows off his ability to deliver action sequences that invigorate a rather tepid plot (as in the case of Bullet Train), but also showcase a well-written story centered around a likable character played by a charismatic actor (i.e. Deadpool 2). Working from a script by Drew Pearce (whom he collaborated last with making 2019’s Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw), Leitch embraces the entertainment value of the original property without resorting to a camp approach as have many other television adaptations. What emerges is an action/adventure piece with a legitimate mystery for the hero to solve while simultaneously trying to get his life back on track.

As Colt, Gosling does a fine job of blending the character’s natural suave demeanor with the uncertainty he is facing during this crossroads moment of his life path. Likewise, Blunt is equally capable as the talented filmmaker who is unsure exactly why her former flame has shown up on her set after so much time away. Taylor-Johnson embraces the bombastic nature of his character as a spoiled star too used to getting his way.

Ryan Gosling in "The Fall Guy."Ryan Gosling in "The Fall Guy."

Ryan Gosling in “The Fall Guy.”

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Nods to the original television show, courtesy of David Scheunemann’s production design, including Colt’s iconic truck, prove a welcome and non-distracting homage to the series. Along with Leitch’s use of movement to capture the action sequences, the editing provided by Elísabet Ronaldsdóttir allows the film’s action sequences to move along at a brisk and well-paced speed.

The nostalgic and non-ironic adaptation of the television series The Fall Guy allows the film to stand on its own apart from its namesake property (although there is a cameo at the end of the credits featuring original stars of the series) and exist as its own successful action/adventure film.

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