Sharathulu Varthisthai Movie Review: Short and Boring Film
Fame came to Chaitanya Rao Madadi from roles in films including “Keeda Cola,” “Annapurna Photo Studio,” and the online series “30 Weds 21.” “Sharathulu Varthisthai,” his newest feature film, premiered today.
Find out what it’s good and bad for.
In a Karimnagar government office, Chiranjeevi (Chaitanya Rao) works as an underling. Out of his mother, brother, and sister’s four children, he is the only earner. A woman named Vijayashanti (Bhoomi Shetty) has captured his heart.
After some initial disagreements, Chiru and Vijay’s families finally agreed to the marriage, and the happy couple tied the knot.
Every one of Chiranjeevi’s buddies gets involved in a multi-level marketing plan so they can all get rich fast, but he scolds them and stays away from them whenever they try to recruit him.
He leaves his wife in charge of protecting the money he takes out of the bank one day.
After learning about the company’s free TV and washing machine offers, his mother and wife both join the same multi-level marketing scheme.
Vijayashanti puts her husband’s money into this investment plan. After tricking their clients the previous day, the owners manage to flee. How is this family going to deal with what has happened?
The Performances of Sharathulu Varthisthai:
Chaitanya Rao Madadi gives an honest performance as a middle-class man. He is, however, denied any opportunity to perform.
As a girl from a tiny village, Bhoomi Shetty is perfect. Newer actors have mostly portrayed different parts.
There was clearly a lack of funding for the production of the picture. There are no impressive technical aspects to the film. The music, production design, and cinematography are all quite basic.
An Analysis of Sharathulu Varthisthai |
Making “Sharathulu Vartisthayi” (Conditions Apply) into a short film instead of a feature-length one would have made it more interesting and entertaining. The idea of the film is weak and doesn’t warrant a full-length feature. Also, the new director has no storytelling chops whatsoever.
The first line of “Sharathulu Varthisthayi” is a quotation from Lord Buddha, who said that desire is the source of all evil. The film’s plot centres on the lives of lower-middle class people, as the narration goes on to explain.
An important theme running throughout the film is the propensity of these lower-middle-class persons to fall for deceitful methods. This one sentence sums up the whole narrative. Given the film’s superficial plot, it’s hardly shocking that the inexperienced director struggled to hold our attention.
Karimnagar is where most of the action in the film occurs. Keeping the narrative from becoming tedious and the pacing from being slow is vital, even though it is admirable to show the lives of regular people realistically.
The bulk of the film takes place in unremarkable, visually unappealing settings, such as roads and cramped rooms. There is no dramatic tension, despite the natural speech. Very few people laugh at the jokes.
We lose a lot of time since our hero is reluctant to marry his sweetheart because he isn’t financially secure yet. The hero’s efforts to convince her father to let her marry him are somewhat dull, but he eventually agrees in the following scene.
It seems like the filmmakers and editors didn’t have much taste in deciding when to cut to the next scene. There aren’t many dramatic moments in the story aside from the interval.
We can state categorically that “Sharathulu Varthisthayi” is boring because it has no dramatic components and no interesting story.
Movie: Sharathulu Varthisthai
ibomma Rating: 3/5
Cast: Chaitanya Rao Madadi, Bhoomi Shetty, Nanda Kishore, Santosh Yadav, Deva Raj Palamuru, Padmavathi and others
Dialogues: Peddinti Ashok Kumar
Music: Arun Chiluveru, Prince Henry
DOP: Praveen Vanamali & Shekar Pochampally
Editor: Ch.Vamshi Krishna & Gajjala Rakshith Kumar
Production Designer: Gandhi Nadikudikar
Producers: Srilatha-Nagarjuna Samala, Sharadha – Sreesh Kumar Gunda, Vijaya – Dr. Krishnakanth Chittajallu
Directed by: Akshara
Release Date: March 15, 2024