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Cinematography
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Couple of Songs
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Sundeep Kishan
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Comedy in Parts
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Storyline
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Screenplay
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Slow Narration
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No Supporting Arcs for Supporting Crew
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Couple of forced songs
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Chemistry between the lead pair.
Bottom Line:It’s not a Tiger’s roar rather it is Meow
Story
Vishnu (Rahul Ravindra) and Jai (Sundeep
Kishan), the two orphans become the best friends in the orphanage. The
fondness Jai has for Vishnu was never reciprocated and Vishnu always
feel Jai as a head-ache. When Vishnu was adopted, Jai stays away from
him for years. In 2009, Ganga (Seerat Kapoor) comes to Hyderabad to
attend Yantrika Festival in Geethanjali College of engineering. But
things turn around, when everyone around her, starts thinking her as
Vishnu’s lover. After some confusion both start liking each other in a
week’s time. Ganga gets the job in Hyderabad. When the guardian comes to
know that they fell in love, he decides to take Ganga back to Kasi. But
village head decides to kill them off because inter-cast marriage is a
transgress as per their laws. That’s when Tiger aka. Jai gets the news
and comes to save his friend. The rest of the story is all about how all
ends well.
Star Performance
The performances are below par. Rahul Ravindran,
who is a kind of actor with a branded style though devoid of much
surprisals, does his role with all sincerity. Sundeep Kishen has only a
limited time to show his talents and he proves yet again how overrated
he is, with a dreadful outburst and drama. But he looks promising in his
massy attire and introduction scenes. Run Raja Run fame Seerat Kapoor
makes not much of an impression. The chemistry between the lead pair is
mortifying are best. Kasi Vishwanath, Praveen and Tanikella Bharini are
wasted in small characters. Comedians Thagubothu Ramesh, Chitram Seenu,
Satya, Raghu and Fish Venkat are fine. Satya – Sundeep Kishen and
Sundeep Kishen – Thagubothu Ramesh small threads are comical. Bollywood
actor Bobby Parvez did a brief role as Seerat Kapoor’s father.
Techinical Team
The story of the film is wafer thin. The story
wanders around without a distinct direction, after the initial laughs
while introducing the lead characters, At best, it turns out to be a
romantic socio drama scripted by a layabout, who analysis of the honor
killings is based on assumptions without getting out of his comforts.
The screenplay is in fact an over dose of commercial aspects.
The
director fastidiously adds too many fights, comedy sequences and
preachy lines that could irritate the viewer no less. The narrative
falls flat after a while and you end up cringing in the seat waiting for
this ever dragging script to come to a point. With an ordinary script
(Looks like Aarya 2 meets Pelli Sandadi/Deggaraga Dooramga meets Pranam
meets Mukunda with a pinch of surprise) and a rather conventional
narration, director by Vi Anand (protégé of A R Murugadoss) seems to be
aiming for nothing big. There are lot of frames remind us of A R
Murugadoss’s direction. The entire first half is painfully long building
up to a more serious incident. The jokes are funny in parts at best.
Some of the characters appear at habitué intervals and disappear quite
handily. Like for instance, Kaasi Vishwanath, who adopts the son and
never appears on screen after that. The second half lacks pace and
director simply concludes the serious honor killings issue with some
instructive lines and forced realization sequences.
Chota
K Naidu visuals are top notch. Music by Thaman SS is mediocre except
for Samayya and a couple of inspired themes. Editor Chota K Prasad made
excessive use of optical work. Instead he should have worked a bit more
on trimming the second half. Fights in the film are adequate. Dialogues
in the film works in parts; especially lines like “Eppati Daaka Kullam
Kosam Champi Chusav, Eppudu Manishi La Brathiki Chudu”, “Entha Mandi
Unna Naakenti Raa… Na friend ki Nenu Okkadine Unna”, “”Neekosam ayithe
valatho enti, Avasaram Ayithe Neetho Kuda Godava Padava” are good.
Production Values of “NVR Cinema” are appropriate.
Analysis
Tiger tries to say lots of things, but doesn’t
really succeed in doing it in an impressive way and ends up being
foreseeable, preachy and even jejune. It has a bright line here, but
director Vi Anand hasn’t taken care to formulate that into a echt script
or to narrate it well. There are times when the talent of the
writer/director is in display, in Tiger. But it will demands real
forbearance to spot them, amidst of ho-hum narration. Now, the choice is
yours.
Cast & Crew
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Star Cast :
Sundeep Kishan,
Seerat Kapoor,
Rahul Ravindran
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Producer :
Tagore Madhu, N.V. Prasad
- Director :
V.I.Anand
- Music :
Thaman S
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Released on:
26-06-2015
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