The extreme heaviness of the first half sets a mood verging on boredom for the second half, but that is not the case, luckily. The entire stretch after the hero meets a character from his village, in the city, to the interval block is heart-wrenchingly done. Getting back to the core theme of villagers and their lives in the ‘village’ and the ‘city’ is where the narrative strikes a chord. While that happens there is a commercial track involving the heroine. The narrative soon moves to the city and we see the struggles of once well off villagers. The opening of the film might make Sreekaram look like Shatamanam Bhavati 2. Kishore B succeeds only partially on that score. The key here is to balance it with little commercial touches. On top of that, there is a lot of message and preaching. But, Sharwanand manages to make it likeable and relatable which is a credit to his act. The audience is not compelled to like him.
It is a difficult part to pull off because it is so righteous and nothing he does is wrong. However, at the same time, Sharwanand also comes across as a tad monotonous due to the same reason.
Sharwanand brings for that well through his expression. He seems to be weighted down by a grave issue. He shoulders the entire burden of the movie and it reflects on his face and body language. Sharwanand is well and truly the lead of the movie. What happens when Karthik leaves a lucrative deal to go to the US and instead take up farming is what the movie is all about? What are the challenges he faces and how it affects his relationship with his father is the core drama. His background is that of a poor family from a village depending on farming.
#Drama kannada movie review software
Karthik is a high paid software engineer.