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Thursday, July 29, 2010

Bendu Apparao


Movie Review : Bendu Apparao Previous Next Movie Gallery Videos Movie Review Movie Review Updated on: 19 Oct 2009 Views: 1467 Rating: 3/5

Story:

Bendu Appa Rao (Allari Naresh) is an RMP doctor in a village. He has a sister who gets troubled by her greedy husband (Krishna Bhagawan). Appa Rao earns money from the villagers by doing various mischief activities, making them his patients for every small reason. He earns money only to quench the greed of his brother in law. On the other hand, Padmapriya (Kamna), the daughter of the rich man in the village Raju (Ahuti Prasad) falls in love with Appa Rao.

The story runs on this track but all of a sudden Appa Rao becomes responsible for a secret sum of Rs 15 lakh. Story takes turn there. A school teacher comes into his life.

What is that Rs 15 lakh? How Appa Rao become responsible? Who is that teacher? All that has to be watched on screen.

Performances:

Allari Naresh is at his best as usual. The entire story runs on his shoulders and he carried that efficiently. Once again he proved that he is the best fit as comedy hero in Tollywood after Rajendra Prasad and Naresh. Kamna is ok and suited well for the character.Meghana has a small role as school teacher but oozed the required glamour in a song. Ahuti Prasad deserves right mention in the film as he spilled several laughs with his typical East Godavari slang. Other artistes Jith Mohan Mitra, LB Sri Ram, Suman Shetty, Uttej, Srinivas Reddy, Kondavalasa, Chalapathi Rao, Telangana Shakuntala, Sreepada Hanuma Sastry etc have justified to their characters.

Technical Departments:

EVV comes up with another pure comedy film with Bend Appa Rao. His grip on comedy can be seen through out the film. Music by Koti is just average. Editing was crisp. Cinematography is Okay. Narration is effective. Production values of the film are good. Veligonda Sreenivas has penned subtle and humorous dialogues through out the movie. Every 5 minutes in the movie spills a laugh. Although the story is a routine one, the dialogue part made it appealing for contemporary audience.

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