Kapatadhaari Review
Kapatadhaari Review
When skeletal remains are located in his authority, he digs deeper and unearths a conspiracy from 40 decades back. The way he proves the instance remains applicable forms the narrative.
Overview: Sumanth is just one of those few celebrities in Tollywood who favor sensible scripts on something expansive. His latest movie, the Telugu movie of the Kannada movie Kavaludaari is gripping and keeps the strain through the movie.
The traffic cop believes that he can fix a situation no matter the wing he belongs to. It's only because of his bad luck he has been not able to change despite needing to out of years. When skeletal remains are discovered, they create him dizzy. After he hits the documents, he finds they belong to somebody who died 40 decades back. When the question arises of the value of this situation nowadays, the manager does a fantastic job of convincing the viewer of it with a spin.
While the movie will not follow the age-old formula of thrillers in which the protagonist unties the indications with no immunity and putting aside the simple fact of how a traffic cop will get access to documents from the offense department, the manager manages the movie with logic. The very best thing about Gautham is that he's not depicted as a superhuman using a mastermind; he is only a true cop seeking to solve a crime with the support of a journalist called GK (Jaya Prakash) and retired inspector Ranjit (Nasser). The movie keeps a high pitch in the pre-climax and manages to pull off several edge-of-the-seat moments. Music manager Simon King also makes it engaging.
Sumanth provides a subtle and older performance rather than going over-the-top, pulling his personality nicely. The actor who performs Fernandez also manages to impress.
Director Pradeep Krishnamoorthy keeps the flow moving, which makes the movie worth a watch.
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