

Nushrratt has been seen as a mischievous young woman in practically each of her hits so far and here she gets into a rather serious avtar where she has to play a lot with the silences. One also had to credit Nushrratt Bharuccha and Mita Vashisht who plays the two principle characters. Frankly, if not for all of this, Chhorii wouldn’t have managed to get into the ‘psyche mood’ thay it aspires for. However that happens with just the apt cinematography, lighting, sound design, background score and authentic sets.
#Chandamama stories in telugu to read movie#
It’s not an easy task to set an entire movie at an isolated house in the midst of sugarcane fields and still lend it a classy look and feel. This is where one has to give credit to Vishal and creative team at Vikram Malhotra’s Abundantia Entertainment who ensure that technically the film is quite proficient. Nonetheless, what matters is that the drama is still interesting and hence you look forward to what really happens from this point on for the next 50 odd minutes. This is the reason why even when the moment of reckoning indeed arrives around the interval point, the impact is not as hammer strong as one would have expected since a lot of time is taken to reach here. Still, even though the point has been made, it takes a lot of screen time to keep the prevailing mood on even though as a viewer you tend to get a bit impatient for the crux of the plot to arrive. Once Nushrratt and her husband (Saurabh Goyal) decide to step into an isolated village to escape moneylenders, you know that there isn’t something right at the household, courtesy Mita Vashisht playing a Rajasthani woman who has secrets of her own. Frankly, not much happens in the first 30 minutes. Yes, the movie could well have been a 100 minutes affair and still made a similar impression.

#Chandamama stories in telugu to read plus#
That’s the kind of mood that director Vishal Furia manages to create in this two hour plus movie that takes its time to settle in and then unleashes something that is beyond your imagination. Why just does, even a ‘chandamama’ tale of a crow and a sparrow can send shivers down your spine.

Instead, it’s the haunting scenes at work where sugarcane fields can look ominous and three innocent looking kids can create mayhem. No ‘bhatakti aatma’ jumping from the ceiling. There aren’t any horror faces staring down at you from a window. Now this is what you call as a true ‘mood film’. Starring: Nushrratt Bharuccha, Mita Vashisht, Rajesh Jais, Saurabh Goyal, Pallavi Ajay and Yaaneea Bharadwaj.
