Malleshwari (charmee) is a dance choreographer who trains a team of kids and their goal is to win the ‘Sye Aata’ dance competition being held in a TV channel. They are already into the semifinals and go to Hyderabad from Vizag to take part in it. They also make it to the finals and begin preparing for that. In this process, Malleswari comes across Shankar Babai (kota) a notorious goon and this eventually leads her to another goon Pandit (sivaprasad), the arch enemy for Babai. A twist occurs when Babai’s son gets killed and Pandit is suspected. In order to take revenge, Babai traps Malleshwari and assigns her the task of killing Pandit’s son (ajay). What happens from there forms the rest of the story.
Crew and cast
The director has come up with a rather confusing storyline and he was unable to cushion it with presentation or narrative. The dialogues were average, the script was lousy and the screenplay was not good. Background score was neat and two songs were okay but cinematography was average. Editing was not upto the mark. Costumes were okay in few instances and art department was effective in songs. Charmee tries her best to give oxygen to the film with her performance and shades of oomph. Kota was the best among the lot with his matured performance and versatile act. Ajay was alright. Siva Prasad was okay, Nasser was quick, Ali got few smiles, Prabhakar was convincing, M S Narayana was witty, master Bharath was good, Omkar was raw, the others didn’t have much to offer.
Analysis
The film would have been a lot better if the makers focused only on the dance issue instead of mixing it with various other tracks. Though the idea was laudable, it takes deft handling of the script and efficient screenplay to get it onto the screen. The major flaw is the direction and added to that was the disjointed tracks which made the viewer jump from one situation to other without ever getting involved into the film. This is hard one to click at the box office.