The film is still doing great. Yesterday's evening show was full in Fame.
The film is still doing great. Yesterday's evening show was full in Fame.
:lol:
Kiccha Sudeep @KicchaSudeep
Eega hindi version releasing on Oct 12th confrmd by SSR sir,,,,nwww,,tatsssss grttttt newsss...
Saw it yesterday. First 20 minutes or so was very blade / loud / crass / badly acted like typical Telugu movies. And the last 15 mins or so (save for the climox, I am talking about the tandra scenes) were very uninteresting and yawn-inducing. But the rest of the film was very imaginative. The EE's intro scene with the soap bubbles was kaala kaaminga saar type. I know that the jokes were just a mere extension of that dharmaththin thalaivan scene, but I thoroughly enjoyed them. And stunning graphics too. Definitely worth a watch for the wildly imaginative EE portions. The miniature masks / weight lifting etc,. fantastic. Rajmouli saar, well done. I never thought I would say this after watching Magadheeraa and this film's trailer.
Sam was very sweet but can't sinmayeee's tupping. I was like Sudheep with the EE inside my eardrums whenever Sam spoke.
On TV joe. Relatively large screen / home theater system etc., Usually that's how I watch movies.. Obviously nothing beats the theater experience, and I love watching movies on theater, but for people like us who are not blessed as much, this is the only way to watch movies.
Yeah, This was especially meant for large screen experience.. But sufficiently large screen with good sound system, on good print, should still be good..
With Naan-E, SSR truly enhances and makes a wild move from Telugu cinema, which are uniformly blade / loud / crass / badly acted because it dispense its trademark 'mainstream hero' and gets an insect to fill in(thank god). Even Magadheera, which still has impressive aural-visual design and execution. But between N-E, Magadheera, latter is literally a waste in TV. N-E is still rather good, and imaginative. Because it goes beyond nice sets, elaborate mural-like feel.. Design, planning and production all truly deserving credit.