Tripura Movie Review
Story:
Tripura (Swathi) is an innocent village girls suffers with a weird problem of foreseeing the future in her dreams. She gets married to Chandra (Naveen Chandra) and moves to city to get settled in life. However the dreams follow here there too and creates a whirlwind in her life. Rest of the story is about all that happens and who is Eesha (Pooja) who enters in to Chandra and Tripura’s life
Performances:
Colours Swathi had tried a role which is contrary to her image so far. She is seen as a matured housewife in the film and even put on some weight to get in to the skin of the character. However her voice was little amateur in some key scenes which defeat the purpose. But then her acting skills need a pat on the back.
Naveen Chandra was elegant in his role and managed to keep up the curiosty of his character. Pooja Ramachandran is good in the limited role she was given. Sapthagiri is the major highlight of the film drawing claps from the audience.
Technical Performances:
Director Raaj Kiran selected yet another horror comedy for his second film. However Tripura story seem to be going on predictable lines. Dreaming the future is something we have seen in Neelakanta’s Maaya and the horror part is also very much on expected lines. Sapthagiri handled the comedy part well but Horror component is not properly addressed. However by the end of the film, we get a okay kind of feeling with the help of few twists and screenplay by Veligonda Srinivas.
Kamaran’s music failed to rake any special interest. Most of the songs are breaks for the audience to get some fresh air out of the theater. Back ground score is decent. Camera work is decent while editing should have been better. Production Values are adequate.
Plus Points:
1. Good Performances
2. Sapthagiri’s comedy
3. Some good twists and climax
Minus Points:
1. Lack of good dose horror.
2. Bad treatment
Final Say:
Tripura despite some glitches here and there, manages to entertain you as a whole. Some more care in making the film more horror-some, would have made it cross the line. It has to been seen how the audience embrace it finally.