Kothapalli lo Okappudu Movie Review: After getting great reviews, the same set of team members now return in Kothapalli lo Okappudu, a rural drama directed and produced by Pravina Paruchuri, who acted in the earlier film as well. With Rana Daggubati funding this venture, there is a decent buzz for this chasm set for a July 18th release as it attempts to depict village life in raw and grounded lenses did it succeed?
The story takes us to the fake Kothapalli village, where Appanna (Ravindra Vijay), a cruel moneylender, casts a fearsome shadow over an entire village with high-interest loans. Appanna’s assistant Ramakrishna (Manoj Chandra) is a good guy himself who also runs a recording dance company. Ramakrishna loves Savitri (Mounika T), the granddaughter of village head Zamindar Reddy (Banerjee).
In seeking help to woo Savitri, his attempts are thwarted by a misunderstanding prompting a local woman, Aadha (Usha Bonela), who actually likes him, into proposing marriage to him. Just as things began to move toward an unexpected wedding, Appanna steps in and tragically falls into a ditch and dies. What follows is the life of Ramakrishna after Appanna’s death.
The attempt to recreate the grounded flavor of C/o Kancharapalem in this film seems to have worked less than it did on paper. Forthright, the first half is slow and light on conflict. The narration at times becomes unclear, leaving the audience confused. A dramatic twist in the interval block raises some interest, but the second half crawls, and the storytelling feels off-beat.
The intent is to explore human emotions on a deeper level-fear, hope, and helplessness-yet, probably few attentive viewers will relate to it. A casual viewer seeking entertainment might find this film terribly wrong.
Usha Bonela sparkles in her performance through natural expressions with subtle humor. Ravindra Vijay, Banerjee, and Manoj Chandra shine well, though Monica’s screen presence was minimal. The cinematography, editing, and background score are rather ordinary, with more poor production values.
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Some draggy moments during the first half
Strong performances from Usha Bonela
A storyline different from the norm with a rural backdrop
Poor direction and a lackluster screenplay
Inconsistent pacing and editing antics
Substandard technical values
Kothapalli lo Okappudu puts forth an interesting idea; the more theatrical treatment seldom kept the attention. It could better connect with the audience at OTT, where such realistic stories gain real appreciation.