STORY: A youthful couple got involved in a mishap in the middle of nowhere. When they go out look for help, they stagger across an old graveyard. They somehow reach home and things appeared to be quite normal, except when they look into the mirror, they observe someone else.
idiosyncrasy and turns to keep the group of spectators intrigued however regularly plays with a perilous line among innovative and unsurprising. He succeeds, however not generally.
STORY: A youthful couple engages in a mishap amidst no place. When they go out searching for assistance, they unearth an old graveyard. They by one way or another achieve home and things appear to be typical, aside from when they investigate the mirror, they see another person.
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Ninnu Veedani Needanu Nene |
REVIEW: ghostly suspenseful story tend to follow a parallel pattern. The characters appear normal, but find themselves in strangely weird conditions and the whole thing around them appears to be preoccupied. In Ninu Veedani Needanu Nene(NVNN), director Caarthik Raju fetches in a few peculiarities and twists to hang out the audience involved but often flirts with a dangerous line between imaginative and expected. He does succeed, but not often.
NVNN opens in 2035 and we perceive a veteran psychiatrist (Murali Sharma) who facilitate a young group of students with their hypothesis on mystical elements. He tells them about a case that was especially close to him, the story of Rishi (Sundeep Kishan) and Dia (Anya Singh), a youthful married pair who goes on a road trip and get caught up in a major disaster. They find themselves in a isolated area and walk towards a graveyard. They still handle to get home and things look like to be normal yet again, but when they look within the mirror, they notice someone else instead of them. Whenever Rishi and Dia look at their reflection in a mirror, they witness Arjun (Vennela Kishore) and Madhavi (Pragathi) instead. How they shatter this mystery and turn out to be normal shape again is the bottom of the story.
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A Still From NVNN |
In spite of a few peculiar circumstances, the first hour fascinating. There are consistent twists and spins and you speak about to the characters' distress, horror and torture. The hilarity is dazzling and the awfulness element is not overdone. Posani, in particular, is entertaining as the cop who find out there's a ghost living inside the characters. There are some slight modifications to the plan in the middle, which is smartly done and changes the manner you watch the movie.
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Sandeep Kishan in NVNN |
Once you get past the subtle twists and turns, the director appears to run of thoughts. The movie entirely drops its energy in the second half and the hero’s hunt for answers is barely convincing. The climax is even not as good as.
Sandeep Kishan's character is autocratic, and is frequently projected as the guy who defends his wife at every time. "Don't worry, I'm there," he constantly keeps telling her, and yet, we almost get to see her side of the story, and her feelings, although she's pretty much going through the same thing bizarre. However, the film is picked up by the brilliancy of Murali Sharma, Posani Murali Krishna and Vennela Kishore — all of whom bring star performances. Vennela Kishore is more than just a hilarious guy and he illustrates that yet again, and looks realistic in every surround he's in.
NVNN starts with a bunch of assurance and has a few vivid moments, but it be unable to find haze as it goes all along and turns into a somewhat tedious show. Let's Hope To Be The Best.!