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			 Ongolu Gittha – Movie Review Ongolu Gittha – Movie Review
			
				
					 
 Cast: Ram, Kriti Karabanda, Direction: Bhaskar
 
 
 Ongolu Gittha is a kind of film which should have been made for the  Tamil audience, and dubbed later into Telugu after it did modest  business in the state of TN (but even then, it would not have connected  to us). To be fair to Bhaskar, he does leave his mark at places, but  overall, the film is a letdown. Bhaskar is one of the few directors who  is a dab hand at portraying the main characters with a tinge of  peculiarity that are mainly found in novels. Here he does seem to  disguise an oldish story in the garb of unique narration, but he fails  miserably in making it a fascinating journey, and it is difficult to  find a Telugu audience who would find the film a worthy watch.
 
 The story, on the face of it, has the usual tit-for-tat angle. There  is a flashback, there is the hero whose street-smartness is dealt with  in a disinteresting fashion, his heroine does nothing but show either  embarrassment or her navel or both. Above all, GV Prakash Kumar’s tacky  tunes do not give impetus to songs, most of which come unwelcomed.
 The opening scene proves that the director had not done his home work  properly (surprising, especially because he had handled more ambitious  sequences in Parugu well deftly). As a child, Ram arrives at the Ongolu  michi yard, calmly and confidently making money big time in a jiffy. He  grows up to be someone who is looked up to for his honesty, guts and  business sense.
 The yard’s beloved chairman, played by Prakash Raj (he is the one and  only lovable actor of OG), is the other most important character. The  two scenes that raise the pitch in first half are those in which Ram and  PR’s other side is revealed. The scene in the center of the yard,  involving Ram, PR, Ahuthi Prasad (is an MLA)and the farmers, is another  well-written scene.
 After PR’s true character is revealed, the story has no more twists  and turns. It is not bad in itself, and if you have an able dialogue  writer and good actors, the director should justifiably make it a mature  drama (with action thrown in here and there) to keep the audience  glued. Unfortunately, the scenes – be it those between the hero and the  villain, the hero and his father (Prabhu gets good screen time), the  hero and his girl – weaved in the second half fall flat. For heaven’s  sake, there should have been a defining moment involving the heroine and  her villainous father.
 Despite its unexciting plot, OG presents some elements which stand  testimony to Bhaskar’s directorial touch. The pre-interval fight-song  interlude (shot in lush greenery), which has Ram bashing up the baddies  and a drunken Prabhu singing his song oblivious of who is saving him  from death, deserves kudos. In a Tamil Nadu theatre, it would have been  received with cheers. PR wearing a fake smile to camouflage his menacing  nature, and he beautifying his face by applying fairness cream and  powder after every episode of villainy, is splendid.
 Though it is anyone’s guess as to who will win the battle finally, the screenplay leading up to the denouement is below par.
 With comedy failing to enthuse, there is no redeeming element in  sight. Kishore Das (famous for anchoring adult programmes on tv) gets to  play the hero’s sidekick, and one wonders what he is doing here when he  suits best to be Maruthi’s actor. Ali never looked worse when he wore a  women’s attire. He could have been totally avoided.
 Ram was definitely better in Kandireega and Endukante Premanta. While  Karunakaran helped him show a new side in his last film, Bhaskar, who  has extracted three good performances from Sid, Arjun and Cherry, fails  to live up to expectations. A creative performance from Prakash Raj  deserves appreciation, for it comes at a time when the versatile actor  has been seen to be playing routine characters. Krithi Karbanda looks  attractive but she has nothing much to do.
 Ahuthi Prasad, Abhimanyu Singh and JP fit the bill.
 The BG score by Mani Sharma is alright. One feels that he disappoints  with his songs, always and almost. The cinematographer shows flashes of  brilliance at places.
 
 
 
 Kriti Karabanda More stills
 
 
 Keywords: Ram, Kriti Karabanda,,Bhaskar,Ongolu Gittha ,Tamil audience, modest business, Bhaskar,Prakash Raj , Ahuthi Prasad, Kishore Das,Kandireega , Endukante Premant, Karunakaran, Abhimanyu Singh, Mani Sharma,tamil movie review,tamil film news,Ongolu Gittha movie review
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
			
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