Naa Alludu Telugu Movie

Feature Film | 2005
Critics:
Dec 30, 2004 By B. Anuradha


In Telugu film "Naa Alludu", debutant director Vara relies more on lewd scenes and double-entendre than cinematic quality to attract the audiences.



NTR Jr. is denting his newfound stardom by picking wrong scripts. Despite a disaster like "Andhrawala", the actor has again picked a contrived plot.


His 'angry young man' image needs to be backed by themes as in "Samba" and "Simhadri".


Vara, erstwhile assistant of K. Raghavendra Rao, follows his guru by focusing the camera on the navel of the heroines but lacks the skills to churn out a hit. Vijayendra Prasad's poor script does little to help.


Glam girls Shreya and Genelia reveal more of their skin than talent. They would have felt embarrassed if they had known the meaning of the lewd lines they were made to mouth.


Composer Devisri Prasad, who has merely rehashed tunes of Tamil hit "Machan Peru Madure", needs to work hard on his melodies than just riding on his luck. The film's album deserves no second hearing.


The story begins with an orphaned NTR Jr. applying for a job in the business empire of Ramya Krishna. He loses the job since Ramya wants to teach him a lesson for teasing her twin daughters. He vows to become the owner of the empire one day by marrying one of Ramya's daughters. He impresses Shreya and she reciprocates. Ramya hires a coconut vendor (an NTR look alike) to bash up her daughter's lover.


For the rest, you have to watch the film, if you do not mind an overdose of lewdness.


B. Anuradha

   

MOVIE REVIEWS