What Is Good
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Concept
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Cinematography
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Background Music
What Is Bad
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Female Leads
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Predictable Narration
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Silly Climax
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Editing
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Situation less Songs
Bottom Line: Thriller fails to THRILL
Neelakanta Maaya Review - Story
The very first scene of Maaya looks like a good
omen with some really good acting, and it turns out to be just the start of a
sequence of appalling scenes that literally claw into you in no time. Meghana
(Avanthika), experiences Extra Sensory Perception and sees the future of her
near dear. In the meanwhile, famous Fashion Designer Siddharth (Harshavardhan
Rane) meets Meghana for a traditional programme about local weavers. In a short
time both start liking each other, but things turns around when Meghana’s
childhood friend Pooja (Sushma Raj) returns to Hyderabad. Suddenly, Meghana
starts experiencing ESP (Extra Sensory Perception) again as she starts getting
close to Siddharth. She is unable to understand or explain this gift, except to
recall that it started when she was very young. She tries to use this gift to
help people, despite the risk. Seeing the latest frames about Pooja and
Siddharth, Meghana, she decides to use her supernatural powers to get to the
bottom of this incident and comes up with startling facts.
Neelakanta Maaya Review - Star Performance
The one reason you could watch Maaya is due to the performance by
the lead actor. Harshavardhan Rane puts his heart and soul into the film and at
times manages to rise way above the script. But its disappointing to see
Harshavardhan try out something different and eventually being led down by a
very talented director. Avanthika is just okay. She needs to work on her
expressions mainly. Director failed to elevate her character in a proper way.
Sushma Raj literally chivies audience with her over excitement. Telugu actress
Nandini Rai plays an important character but she was limited in her role. Anita
Choudary, Naga Babu, Venu and Jhansi supported the lead cast perfectly.
Neelakanta Maaya Review - Techinical Team
Over the years, and with a few exceptions like Mr. Medhavi and
Chammak Challo, director Neelakanta's name on a film's credits has come to
represent a fairly high standard in storytelling. Even without big budgets and
fancy imaginations, the director delivered engaging stories and endearing
characters like those in Show and Missamma, to name just two. With his latest,
Maaya though, Neelakanta turns in his most badly executed effort. Random scenes
are slapped together willy-nilly, loose ends never tied, and the narrative
suffers from pace problems. Neelakanta throws in a silly investigation with the
heroine, and this slackens the proceedings considerably. Still, most shocking
of all is Neelakanta’s inept handling of actors here. Things even get bizarre,
when director leaves away loopholes to conclude things in the end. Like, How
did Sushma get arrested even after the case closed in Delhi – How can Jhansi
say things will only happen when all the three leads get together for an event
(When Avanthika was able to see the past of Harshavardhan & Nandini Rai
without any connection) - Why did ESP stopped working for Avanthika post
childhood event.. etc.
Director Neelakanta attempts a film making format he seems neither
familiar nor comfortable with, and as a result the film lacks the integrity of
his previous successes. Maaya is neither thriller nor farfetched and apart from
the lavish cinematography, it’s an exercise in inutility. There's no scope for
music in the film and the Five songs (opening titles, romantic song, Qawwali,
Sad track and end credits) are passable. The background score is good. Editing
of the film is not upto the mark. Production Values of the film are fine.
Neelakanta Maaya Review - Analysis
The concept is great, but the script and the direction by
Neelakanta make Maaya an extremely painful watch. There isn’t much to say about
this movie, rather stupid and really annoying with its naive narration. When it
comes to directing a super-natural suspense thriller, the key is to make a
highly unrealistic concept believable. Most importantly, the answers raised in
the screenplay have to be convincing and justified. But the second half is very
hard to digest and the twist in the end, which was probably meant to shock the
audience, is outright stupid. What happened, Mr. Neelakanta?.
Neelakanta Maaya Review - Cast & Crew
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Title : Neelakanta Maaya Telugu Movie
Review, Rating
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Star Cast : Harshvardhan Rane, Sushma Raj, Avantika Mishra
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Producer
: Pramod Uppalapati,Vamsi Krishna Reddy
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Director
: Neelakanta
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Music
: Shekar Chandra.
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Released
on: 1-08-2014