Srimannarayana Movie Review:
Story:
Noble person Kalki Narayana Murthy (Vijay Kumar) serves poor people and farmers a lot in his village. His son Srimannarayana (Balakrishna) who is a journalist by profession too follows the same. His competitor Swapnika (Parvathi Melton) who also works as a news reporter falls for him. Narayana Murthy collects a huge amount in terms of donations to help the troubled farmers. After several serious events, Srimannarayana lands in jail. To know the twists in the story watch the film on Big-screen.
Performances:
Balakrishna steals the show with his awesome power-packed acting through out the film. He looks young, stylish and energetic as Journalist Srimannarayana. Balakrishna carried an amazing energy in songs and fights. His electrifying dialogue delivery wooed his fans and masses. Balayya’s lord Narasimha avatar is highlight.
The leading ladies Parvathi Melton and Isha Chawla are good in their limited parts. Isha character has required oomph factor to enthrall frontbenchers, while Melton looked thin and some times unhealthy, glamour wise she scores very low marks.
Dharmavarapu and Duvvasi Mohan’s comedy is laugh-riot. Suresh, Vinod Kumar, Supreet and Kota delivered their best villainous performance. And the rest of the cast is okay.
Technical Analysis:
Cinematography done by Surrender Reddy is topnotch; his lighting technique and picturisation skills are appreciable. Each and every frame looks bright on screen. Chakri Music is already a hit with masses and fans ahead of the film’s release. The songs suited Balayya image. Balakrishna excelled in dances like a young hero for these peppy numbers. BGM is superb. Production values of Yellow Flowers are Grand.
Screenplay could have been tight to add extra weight. Dialogues penned by Ghatikachalam suited Balayya image well. Ravi kumar Chawali has showed his capability by making a film with top star Balakrishna, that too with in 3 months of time. However, he should have taken care on the story as it is an out-dated one.
Analysis:
Balakrishna’s powerful entrance in his formal dress was awesome and he showed his full energy in first fight. Later, the film runs with slow pace in the narration. But, it picks up with pre-interval scene. High emotional family drama was filmed brilliant. Interval bang is good with twist.
Second half runs better than the first hour with lot more gripping scenes. Mass action elements are there in 2nd half and fans and masses will go frenzy. Fights were well choreographed. However, several loopholes are witnessed through out the film. Climax is highly cliched.
Verdict:
Srimannarayana is strictly for Balakrishna fans and masses, and an average fair for normal audience. Balayya is major saving grace for this movie.
Rating: 3/5
from :bharatdesi.com