Director
Puri
Jagannadh
has
turned
into
a
producer
for
a
big
budget
movie
in
order
to
launch
his
son
as
the
leading
man
in
Telugu
Cinema.
Story
The
story
revolves
majorly
around
two
characters
in
the
movie.
Roshan
(Akash
Puri)
and
Afreen
(Neha
Shetty),
often
get
haunted
by
their
past
life
dreams.
The
acquainted
duo
gets
close
as
Roshan
helps
Afreen
realize
her
dream
of
higher
studies
and
develop
a
strong
liking
towards
each
other.
Meanwhile,
Afreen
is
taken
to
Lahore
by
her
parents
while
Roshan
gets
to
know
that
their
dreams
are
indeed
real
and
they
were
the
exact
same
characters
as
per
the
dreams.
What
were
they
in
their
previous
birth?
Why
are
they
being
haunted
with
dreams
in
this
life?
Were
they
not
able
to
live
their
lives
to
the
fullest?
Anything
attached
to
reincarnation
spikes
up
a
lot
of
interest
with
a
sturdy
characterization.
What
were
they
then?
All
these
form
the
rest
of
the
plot.
Upside
Production
values
Entire
team
effort
Cinematography
Akash
Puri's
debut
performance
Downside
Songs
Over
the
top
second
half
Neha
Shetty's
latter
half
role
Lagging
screenplay
Performances
Akash
Puri
is
convincing
with
his
very
first
movie
as
he
looks
fit
and
mouths
dialogue
with
good
diction
and
clarity.
However,
he
appears
too
young
for
the
reincarnation
characterization.
With
persistent
determination,
Akash
has
shown
all
signs
of
making
it
big
in
T-Town.
Neha
Shetty
is
good
in
first
half
but
doesn't
seem
to
fit
the
bill
during
the
latter
half.
Murali
Sharma,
Sayaji
Shinde
and
others
have
rendered
justice
to
their
roles.
Technical
Aspects
The
CGI
team
deserves
a
special
pat
on
their
back
as
the
quality
rendered
is
top
notch.
For
a
movie
with
such
storyline,
the
technical
team
should
be
rich
and
this
team
stands
at
the
top.
Cinematography
by
Vishnu
Sarma
is
another
take-away
as
it
sets
in
the
minds
of
audience
in
line
with
the
narration.
Editing
by
Junaid
Siddiquii
compliments
cinematography
to
the
level
best.
Puri
is
known
for
rugged
and
rigid
characterization
of
his
heroes
who
stand
between
the
thin
line
of
protagonist
and
antagonist.
For
a
change,
he
has
deviated
from
his
ideology
(may
be
for
the
fact
that
he
is
launching
his
son),
and
has
taken
a
different
path.
Though
the
effort
from
the
maverick
director,
Puri
Jagannadh,
is
visible,
his
screenwriting
in
the
second
half
and
logical
loopholes
let
him
down
totally.
At
a
certain
point,
the
audience
are
tested
with
their
patience
making
Mehbooba
quite
a
tiresome
experience.