Kathalo Rajakumari | |
Director: | Mahesh Surapaneni |
Producer: | Soundarya Narra Prashanthi Bheeram Sudhakar Reddy Krishna Vijay |
Screenplay: | Mahesh Surapaneni |
Story: | Mahesh Surapaneni |
Starring: | Nara Rohit Namitha Pramod |
Music: | Ilaiyaraaja Vishal Chandrasekhar |
Cinematography: | Naresh K. Rana |
Editing: | Karthika Srinivas |
Studio: | Aarohi Cinema Aran Media Works Srihaas Entertainments Sudhakar Impex (India) Private Limited |
Distributor: | Freeze Frame Films |
Country: | India |
Language: | Telugu |
Kathalo Rajakumari is a 2017 Indian Telugu-language romantic drama film directed by debutant Mahesh Surapaneni and produced by Soundarya Narra, Prashanthi, Bheeram Sudhakar Reddy, and Krishna Vijay. Nara Rohit and Namitha Pramod play the lead roles in the movie. Naga Shourya makes a cameo appearance in this film.
The movie deals with two film stars: Arjun (Nara Rohit), an arrogant film star famous for playing the antagonist; and Shourya (Naga Shourya), the underdog who does not get enough credit for his hard work. Arjun, who is famous for his villainous streak and attitude, feels he has lost his mean game and decides to become a villain in real life so that he can gain his mean streak back. He chooses his childhood friend Sita (Namitha Pramod) for this purpose and decides to make her his victim. What does he do and what happens next forms the rest of the plot.
Kathalo Rajakumari | |
Type: | soundtrack |
Artist: | Vishal Chandrasekhar |
Released: | 7 July 2017 |
Recorded: | 2017 |
Genre: | Feature film soundtrack |
Length: | 22:56 |
Label: | Aran Music |
Producer: | Vishal Chandrasekhar Ilaiyaraaja |
Prev Title: | Rangoon |
Prev Year: | 2017 |
Next Title: | Hara Hara Mahadevaki |
Next Year: | 2017 |
The music was composed by Vishal Chandrasekhar, Ilaiyaraaja and Released by Aran Music.
A critic from 123telugu rated the film two and one-fourth out of five stars and wrote that "Kathalo Rajakumari is yet another disappointing outing from Nara Rohit. Though the first half is okay with some passable moments, the second half completely disappoints the audience with its boring and slow paced narration."[1] A critic from The Times of India rated the film one-and-a-half out of five stars and wrote that "the whole film seems like something only a child could dream up, with trivial incidents leading to catastrophic consequences."[2] A critic from Firstpost wrote that "Nara Rohith, Naga Shourya's film is avoidable at best".[3]