Vinaro Bhagyamu Vishnu Katha: Weak execution
The makers of Kiran Abbavaram’s Vinaro Bhagyamu Vishnu Katha promoted the film as a youthful love comedy with an interesting twist. Let’s see what the film has to offer.
Story: Things take a turn as two lovely individuals, Vishnu (Kiran) and Darshana (Kashmira) cross paths, developing a strong bond and becoming integral for each other. But all hell breaks lose after they’re stuck in a terror attack.
Analysis: Firstly, Kiran picks an interesting script that has a decent premise. The terror attack set up is fresh to the Telugu audience and the love drama thread surrounding it looks interesting.
But the issue here is that there’s no drama to gel it all together. There are many parallel threads in the film but none fully propel the core plot. This is the main deficit of the film.
The comedy works out in parts. The opening half has a handful of bright moments here and there. The interval twist with the terror backdrop evokes interest.
But the film loses the steam in the latter half where better writing was needed to make for a more compelling watch. The film loses track in the penultimate portion, thus dampening the whole mood.
A better written latter half could’ve worked more in the favor of the film. The lethargic presentation doesn’t help the cause.
The background score and the cinematography are pretty decent which works well in favor of the narrative. The production values are of top quality.
Verdict: VBVK is a below par action comedy with a decent premise. The film needed better writing in the latter half to make for a more compelling watch.