Time fleets and so is the case with a plethora of movies that
release every week. Of the fifty odd movies released so far in
the present year in Tollywood, there has been only one sensational
hit, four super hits (counting the success of Hanuman
Junction into 2002), one hit and a few safe bets. Statistically
speaking, the hit percentage so far has been 10%, which is neither
worse nor better than what it was in the first half of last year.
If just being consistent (and not competent) is a consolation
then Tollywood indeed did better. At least, it did not deteriorate
from last year's performance if not improve and prove that it
could do better. But don't we all agree at least on one point
that our moviemakers could do much better than what they think
they can.
Now,
what our moviemakers think is another debatable issue. If they
thought that roping in sought after heroes and heroines and one-hit
old directors to deliver instant hits then they were proved wrong
with the dismal failures of Vasu,
Seema Simham.
If they thought that packaging a movie with technical gloss, daredevil
stunts and breathtaking locales, catering to the eyes and not
the hearts of the audience thereby shunning the soul of the movie,
then they better think again after what happened to Takkari
Donga. If they thought that remaking successful movies from
ever reliable languages without bothering whether they suited
our nativity or if they were being well made without tampering
the originals, then they better learn lessons from the poor performances
of Seshu and Tappu
Chesi Pappu Koodu. Lastly, if they thought that they could
cash on the 'youth frenzy' by casting wooden faces in crappy college
themes then
well examples in this category are endless and
before they make us listless, lets run through the hits, safe
bets and duds in the first half of 2002.
Sensational
hit
Aadi
(review)
Cast: NTR, Keerthi Chawla
Music: Mani Sharma
Producer: P Naga Lakshmi
Story - Screenplay - Direction: VV Vinayak
Theatrical Release Date: 28th March 2002
Jr. NTR who has tasted alternating successes and failures like
Tarun with Ninnu
Choodalani, Student
No. 1, Subbu
and Aadi, has gained
enormous mass following with the sensational hit of Aadi. The
manner in which VV Vinayak has projected Jr. NTR as a mass hero
is unbelievable. With the success of Aadi,
Jr. NTR has certainly gained an edge over his contemporaries like
Tarun and Uday Kiran. VV Vinayak's amazing direction, Spell binding
action sequences (by Vikram Dharma), Jr. NTR himself and Paruchuri
Brothers' dialogues (to some extent) have lifted Aadi
from a routine seema movie to a riveting hit. Aadi is the biggest
hit so far in 2002.
Persons most benefited by the success of Aadi: Jr. NTR
and VV Vinayak
Super
hits (listed based on their release dates)
Hanuman
Junction (review)
Cast: Jagapati Babu, Venu, Arjun, Laya, Sneha, Vijaya Lakshmi
Dialogues: Thotapalli Madhu
Music: Suresh Peters
Producer: MV Lakshmi
Screenplay - Direction: M Raja
Theatrical Release Date: 21st December 2001
Though Hanuman
Junction released in the final week of 2001, its success saga
flagged off in 2002. Though a remake of a Malayalam hit Thenkasipattanam,
M Raja adapted it well to suit the Telugu nativity and filled
it with ample doses of comedy and mass elements which made the
audience visit this Junction so frequently that it turned out
to be one of the super hits of 2001/2002. The success of this
movie has added another feather to Editor Mohan's (the presenter
of this movie and father of M. Raja) cap whose last movie Kshemanga
Velli Labhanga Randi was a super hit as well.
Person(s) most benefited by the success of Hanuman Junction:
Editor Mohan
Nuvvu
Leka Nenu Lenu (NLNL) (review)
Cast: Tarun, Arti Agrawal
Music: RP Patnaik
Producer: D Suresh Babu
Story - Screenplay - Direction - Dialogues: Y Kasi Viswanath
Theatrical Release Date: 14th January 2002
Released during the festive mood of Sankranthi, NLNL
had to face tough competition from Balakrishna's Seema
Simham and Mahesh Babu's Takkari
Donga. But it easily emerged a winner among the Sankranthi
releases mainly due to good music (by RP), rib-tickling comedy
(by Sunil), Arti Agarwal's oomph and wonderful treatment by director
Kasi Viswanath. Though it looked like an extension to Nuvve
Kavali and Nuvvu
Naaku Nachhav, the audience did not mind sipping old wine
in a new bottle than being bothered by ferocious lions and cowboy
thieves.
Persons most benefited by the success of NLNL: Arti Agarwal
and Kasi Viswanath
Santosham
(review)
Cast: Nagarjuna, Gracy Singh, Shriya, Prabhudeva
Music: RP Patnaik
Producer: KL Narayana
Screenplay: Gopi Mohan & Dasaradh
Story - Dialogues - Direction: Dasaradh
Theatrical Release Date: 9th May 2002
Santosham is all about a simple family story, some lilting tunes,
beautiful heroines (especially Shirya who has become the latest
heartthrob of Andhra) and handsome Nag. Wine gets better as it
grows old. The same applies to Nag and his charm. Though Santosham
reminds us of a plenty of Hindi and Telugu movies, Dasaradh indeed
has done a commendable job in making a simple story click in such
a big way. No stiff competition from other movies has also helped
Santosham
garner huge collections thus making it the biggest grosser among
Nagarjuna's films. Nag, Shriya and soulful music (by RP) are the
success elements of Santosham.
People most benefited by the success of Santosham: Shriya,
Dasaradh and Nagarjuna
Jayam
(review)
Cast: Nitin, Sada, Gopichand
Music: RP Patnaik
Producer - Dialogues - Story - Screenplay - Direction:
Teja
Theatrical Release date: 14th June 2002
Teja is one director who knows the pulse of the youth like the
back of his hand. His earlier works in entertaining and educating
(?) the youth with Chitram
and Nuvvu Nenu
have been successful. But his latest movie Jayam
inspite of receiving average reviews from the critics is touted
to become one of the biggest grossers in the history of Telugu
Cinema. Thanks to Teja's 'real' explosive interviews and bold
statements about Jayam, people are thronging to the theaters to
see what actually made this move a Jayam (success). Beautiful
heroine, power packed performance by Gopichand, neatly interleaved
songs, good camerawork and above all Teja's imaginative direction
contributed to the success of this movie. If Jayam
maintains the same tempo in its collections withstanding the tough
competition in the coming weeks from Allari
Ramudu and Indra
then it is poised to become another sensational hit of 2002.
Person(s) most benefited by the success of Jayam: Teja.
It's too early to talk about Sada and Gopichand, though they were
very good in this movie.
Hit
Lahiri
Lahiri Lahirilo (LLL) (review)
Cast: Aditya, Ankita, Hari Krishna, Bhanu Priya, Vineeth,
Sanghavi, Suman, Rachana
Dialogues: Chintapally Ramana
Music: MM Keeravani
Story - Screenplay - Direction - Production: YVS Chowdary
Theatrical Release Date: 1st May 2002
YVS Chowdary, though dealt with an age-old story line of drama
and revenge in LLL,
gave a fresh treatment to this movie. He succeeded in narrating
the story in an interesting style by inserting twists at the right
moments. Being a multi-starrer like Hanuman
Junction, LLL
has good music (by Keeravani), ample comedy and enough mass elements
that helped this movie become a hit venture.
Person(s) most benefited by the success of LLL: YVS Chowdhary
and Hari Krishna
Some
interesting notes about these hit movies -
- None of
the above movies had extra-ordinary story lines, brilliantly
haunting musical scores, seasoned directors and big stars (except
Nagarjuna in Santosham)
but still they went on to become roaring hits.
- Four of
the above six movies are directed by debutants - M. Raja, Kasi
Viswanath, VV Vinayak and Dasaradh - while Teja and YVS were
just three films old, as directors, before Jayam
and LLL respectively.
- All the
directors (except M.Raja) came up with their own story for their
movies apart from screenplay and direction.
- RP Patnaik
scored music for three films (NLNL,
Santosham
and Jayam)
while his favorites - Kula Sekhar (lyricist) and Usha (singer)
- worked with him in all the three movies. Mani Sarma and Keeravani
resurrected their positions with Aadi
and LLL respectively.
- If Aadi,
Hanuman
Junction and LLL
were more of mass movies with good fights and revenge dramas
then NLNL and
Santosham were
more of youth, feel-good and family movies. Jayam
has a right dosage of mass, youth and comedy elements. All the
six movies had a good dosage of comedy proving that laughter
indeed is the best medicine and the best bait to attract the
audience. The bottom line is - a well-made movie irrespective
of a 'mass/class' tag with ample and apt comedy would definitely
click.
Safe
bets
While Tarun and Jr. NTR tasted huge successes, Uday Kiran had
to settle for an average fare with Kalusukovalani.
Though it was written off initially, thanks to Devi Sri Prasad's
extra-ordinary music and Pratyusha's
untimely death, Kalusukovalani
ended up being a profitable venture. Srikanth starrers O
Chinnadana and Aaduthu
Paaduthu brought smiles on the faces of their distributors
mainly due to the presence of good comedy in both the films. T
Ravi Babu's Allari
and Usha Kiron movies' Manasunte Chalu, made on a shoestring
budgets, managed to stand out on their own at the box-office turning
out to be safe bets.
Bombs
Dasari - Mohan Babu's Kondaveeti
Simhasanam, Mani Ratnam's dubbed film Amrutha,
Tarun's Adrustam
and Superstar Krishna's Chandravamsam
proved that big star cast, popular directors do not necessarily
mean success. In fact these movies turned out to be such damp
squibs that they were pulled out of the theaters within a couple
weeks of their release.
Breezy
bloopers
Vendi Mabbulu,
Manasutho, Raghava,
Neeto Cheppalani
can be called breezy bloopers because their breeze at the box-office
was so swift and effortless that they were pulled out of the theaters
faster than the blink of an eye.
Fast Forward
This month witnesses the release of two mammoth projects directed
by B. Gopal. The first one is Allari
Ramudu starring Jr. NTR, Arti Agarwal, Gajala and Nagma and
the second one is Indra starring
Megastar Chiranjeevi, Sonali Bendre and Arti Agarwal. In the coming
months of the second half of 2002 there are other eagerly awaited
ventures like Balakrishna - VV Vinayak's untitled venture, Venkatesh's
Gemini, Nagarjuna's Manmadhudu, Mahesh Babu's Baabee
and Okkadu, Uday Kiran's Holi, MS Raju - Uday Kiran's
Nee Sneham, Tarun - Trivikram's untitled venture, Tarun
- AM Ratnam's Nee Manasu Naaku Telusu, Jr NTR - AM Ratnam's
Naga, Krishnavamsi's Khadgam, Vamsi's Avunu Valliddaru
Istapaddaru, Poori Jagannath's Idiot and above all
Megastar's Anji. As Pawan Kalyan's Johnny would
release only sometime in the first half of 2003, he will not have
any releases in 2002.
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