Aditya N
Aditya N
Following Geetanjali, Seenu (Srinivas Reddy) and his friends, Ayaan (Sathya), Arudra (Shakalaka Shankar), and Athreya (Sathyam Rajesh), experience joblessness after they fail to produce consecutive hits. An unexpected call comes for them from an Ooty businessman, Vishnu (Rahul Madhav) who offers to direct a horror movie with Anjali (Anjali) in the lead role who now runs a Coffee Shop. The team’s shooting spot is Sangeet Mahal which is a haunted palace. The rest of the story is about what kind of experience did the team went through during the shooting.
Anjali’s performance was not that impressive because of a weak character. Srinivasa Reddy, Satyam Rajesh, and Shakalala Shankar tried to generate fun but could not repeat the magic from the first part as their characters were not much attractive. Sathya and Sunil provide some laughs in the second half. Rahul Madhav was fine, while Ravi Shankar and Ali did not have much scope to perform.
Geetanjali Malli Vachindi tries to impress with the routine concept of blending comedy with horror. However, both the story and the narration are weak. The director brought all the lead actors from the first part, which made the audiences excite to watch this sequel. But even the talented actors will fail if they are not backed with proper writing. Sadly, that is what happened with this movie. While the first half runs on a random note, the second half has some engaging moments with a routine climax.
Sunil enters the Sangeet Mahal in the second half and brings some laughs and energy into the film. Sathya also gets some hilarious moments and makes his character work.
The film has a thin story, and the director should have worked on the comedy parts. However, the director Shiva Turlapati failed in narrating the film except for some parts and which why Geetanjali Malli Vacchindi became an uninteresting experience from start to finish. The routine jump-scares and boring comedy scenes give a feel of a movie going nowhere. The background score is also not impressive. The graphics are unsatisfactory, and the songs are not worth discussing.
Last Line: An Annoying Horror Comedy