The short faction edition of the Veera
simha Reddy show was followed by a trip to Istanbul. Eesha, a
telugu woman from a Turkish household, is played by
shruti Hassan.
balayya is portrayed by Suguna Sundari in a very fashionable avatar, and the choreography is nice. A number of conversations on "Development" vs. "Demolitions" hit the ruling
party square in the face. The entire block is political in
ap terms. The introduction of the villain track and the strong discourse supporting
rayalaseema follow. We get a delightful twist when Veera
simha travels to Istanbul. Balakrishna's acting in the dramatic parts is excellent.
The
mass feast in the first half is excellent. Veera
simha hits the stage after a 15-minute slow start, and the pace stays strong until the intermission. Balayya's emotional performance in the intermission segment will be admired. The BG
music is awesome. The first half of Veera
simha Reddy's production is held together by Sr. Balakrishna's outstanding performance and skillfully planned action blocks. The intermission is neatly emotional, leaving one eager for the second half's actual drama. It currently has the key.
Younger Veera
simha Reddy's story starts after Interval. The flashback is incredibly drawn out and devoid of exciting moments. Younger
balakrishna will now wrap up the remainder of the story in Seema. The
jai Balayya song is a powerful motivator for people. Ma Baava Manobhaval was released as a top-notch item song. Both the
mass steps of
balayya and Chandrika Ravi's
dance were excellent. Old
school tale about Veera
simha Reddy's childhood with sister Bhanumathi (varalakshmi). It might have been superior.
jai continues the
heritage of Veera
simha and fights for the cause. Time for "Mass Mogudochade" music. A typical film's closing song. solely with the masses. The
movie comes to a predictable, mass-market climax.
Veera
simha Reddy has a "mass-blast" first half that is sure to please everyone, but the second half lacks the same energy. The weak villain compounds the problem, and the sister emotion lingers. It turns out to be an average meal that would benefit immensely from the holiday season. The first half of Veera
simha Reddy is excellent and a feast for the
audience and supporters. However, the second half falls short. The traditional second half solely benefits stadiums and B,C centres.
Targeted audience, holiday season, and competing movie results will all affect box office range.