But, the fact that we come to know about that, at the very end, that itself is self-explanatory as to why the movie fails. The climax shows there was a little potential, once we get to know what the movie was all about. It doesn’t come as a surprise then that the characters itself sprout many times – ‘what the hell is happening?’ It is that bad. The various Hollywood inspirations make the overall effort even worse than it actually looks. Nothing seems to happen organically, and artificiality too reaches a new level. However, soon after the interval, things are back to square one and on a much worse level.
It is only towards the interval that little progress happens sans any repetitiveness. Within the predictable premise, the beginning is terrible, and nothing seems to happen for a long time. The movie is predictable from start to end. The director fails spectacularly in getting an engaging outing with the setup in his hand. Not only is the story wafer thin lacking any freshness, but the locations are also limited, and everything has to rely on a tight screenplay. Hari Kishan has a difficult task in his hand with Prema Katha Chitram 2. Overall, the sooner he forgets that a film like this exists the better. The climax portion, which is a total rip off of a legendary act from The Shining is a joke on the audience.
Not that he is convincing doing it, but it makes one feel less miserable compared to what he does otherwise while trying to act. Sumanth Ashwin is alright as long as he doesn’t speak and act cool like a lover boy. What is happening at the farmhouse and why is it happening that way is what the film is all about? Meanwhile, Nandu (Nanditha Swetha), the actual lover of Sudheer starts to act strangely when they plan to meet at a farmhouse. Bindu ( Siddhi Idnani) falls in love with Sudheer (Sumanth Ashwin) and takes extreme action when he doesn’t reciprocate.