Geethanjali, a horror-comedy, was received very well and turned out to be one of the profitable ventures of 2014. The talks are going on,” a source from the film’s unit told IANS.
Swathi Reddy is likely to be part of the sequel. Since then the makers have been on the lookout for a suitable heroine to play the titular role. “The plan to make a sequel was finalised in December last year. The rest of the cast is expected to be finalised soon. The makers of Anjali-Brahmanandam starrer are planning a sequel to the hit horr-com flick!Īctress Swathi Reddy, who is basking in the success of Karthikeya, is being considered for the sequel to last year’s Telugu sleeper hit Geethanjali.
Swathi Reddy to replace Anjali in Geethanajali sequel? Hope Anjali and Tapsee see the film and identify themselves with the character. Only makers should answer whether the charactor is inspired from Anjali life or Tapsee life or a fictitious character. It has even the mentions of her pinni, court cases etc etc.īut some other sources say that the character has shades of heroine Tapsee and her real love episodes with Mahat Raghavendra few years ago.
People who have seen the movie are discussing about the closer shades of Jasmine’s character (screen name Anjali) with real heroine Anjali. In the movie, Jasmine played a role of heroine with the screen name Anjali opposite to Mahat Raghavendra. It’s not the celebration of virtues that mars the purpose, but a palpable lack of earnestness with which Siddique moulds his plot developed by ill-shaped characters.One gossip under discussion in film nagar is heroine Anjali‘s life story in the recent hit movie Ladies and Gentlemen. Ladies and Gentleman engages only in sparse moments courtesy Shajon, who digs up some laughter from a parched narrative. In a matter of seconds, a youth and a girl are saved when they are on the edge of suicide, multi-crore job-initiatives are generated, obstacles are brushed aside like feathers moving pearls of wisdom are scattered and more importantly all girls fall for Bose’s charm and he is spoilt for choice.
Siddique burdens his nobility-packed Bose with a series of missions. In the film, Bose's own tragic-past is drenched in loads of liquor and dream-like memories about his wife Achu, a character Meera Jasmine does with less conviction and plenty of make-up a scary proposition. The more he tries, the result is worse and a badly written script completes the doom. The quaint charm, which Lal had flaunted with much verve once, dissipates into a shallow display of expressions jaded, contrived and unbearably tiring. Siddique blends this warmth with the care-free mien of a drunkard. In no time, his presence magically transforms the life of three women played by Mamta Mohandas, Padmapriya and Mithra Kuriyan. Thus, Bose would utter pearls of wisdom that could leave the most profound philosophers gaping in awe. Siddique toys with the newly-found realm of superhuman heroes whose warm hearts over-flow with virtues transforming them from mere musclemen. Together they would trade meek quips and loud outbursts, often falling flat and rarely evoking laughter. He has a servile side-kick, played by Kalabhavan Shajon, who is swatted around by his boss throughout the movie. The film opens with the swollen face of Chandra Bose, swaying gently on a traffic post in the middle of a night. In Ladies and Gentleman, what once seemed an act of redemption looks more like a mode of ruin. The emotions he could evince belonged more to a sense of relief than joy, a feeling that an actor had redeemed himself. Some time ago, when Lal washed off his bloated machismo with sloshed mischief, his act found ample cheers and applause. Review: Ladies and Gentleman, an elongated, scarcely lovable narrative is mostly about a man rather than about a man and three women as the title suggests. Story: It is the story of a jovial drunkard who finds himself involved in the lives of three different women.