Kousalya Tanaya Ragava
- 2025
- 2h 27min
NOTE IMDb
9,6/10
1,2 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAgainst the backdrop of rural Ramapuram in 1986, Raghava and Kavya's love story unfolds among the colorful village personalities.Against the backdrop of rural Ramapuram in 1986, Raghava and Kavya's love story unfolds among the colorful village personalities.Against the backdrop of rural Ramapuram in 1986, Raghava and Kavya's love story unfolds among the colorful village personalities.
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Kouslya Tanaya Raghava was a based on some ture stories of our older days , he generalized how to be good to others how not to be treated others . Some how sence are lag in first half .but they engaged in second half , all actors and crew members are worked hard , writing review is so easy compare to scripting, execution plain, managing crew and artists, and set's Overall handling and lot of huddles . But Audience need a good output only not what they are struggled in background... Come to movie is good feel movie .. Director had good vison and knowledge I think he has capability to take big commerical movies, if they got big-budget .all the best to whole team.
Kousalya Tanaya Raghava (2025), directed by Swamy Patnaik, is a Telugu romantic drama that transports viewers to the vibrant village of Ramapuram in 1986, weaving a heartfelt love story that resonates with today's Gen Z audience. Starring Rajesh Konchada and Sravani Shetty, the film captures the innocence of rural romance while drawing parallels to modern relationships, offering a nostalgic yet relevant tale of love's triumphs and trials. Despite some pacing issues, its authentic setting, earnest performances, and emotional depth make it a charming watch for those curious about how love blossomed in simpler times.
Kausalya Thanaya Raghava is a movie that can be watched with the family.
The world of 1980 was brought to life, and not only that, the hero (protagonist), heroine, villain, and every other character in the film Kausalya Tanaya Raghava acted very well and brought the film to life.
As if every emotion touches the heart, It is beautifully crafted as if a mother's love is hidden in her heart.
They wrote each song so that it had a good meaning, so that we could sing each song, so that we could listen to each song as a repeater, so that every letter had a meaningful meaning, and added music accordingly, creating wonderful songs.
The director beautifully and clearly conveyed the new values in love and the delicate point that a person should live for the person, not for the caste.
Every forgotten memory of every item used in the 1980s was brought back, and good production values were given.
Finally, a movie that everyone can enjoy sitting down with family and friends.
Waiting for ott.
The world of 1980 was brought to life, and not only that, the hero (protagonist), heroine, villain, and every other character in the film Kausalya Tanaya Raghava acted very well and brought the film to life.
As if every emotion touches the heart, It is beautifully crafted as if a mother's love is hidden in her heart.
They wrote each song so that it had a good meaning, so that we could sing each song, so that we could listen to each song as a repeater, so that every letter had a meaningful meaning, and added music accordingly, creating wonderful songs.
The director beautifully and clearly conveyed the new values in love and the delicate point that a person should live for the person, not for the caste.
Every forgotten memory of every item used in the 1980s was brought back, and good production values were given.
Finally, a movie that everyone can enjoy sitting down with family and friends.
Waiting for ott.
Just watched this movie and truly loved it! The songs are melodious and perfectly blend with the story. The love story is sweet and touching, and the emotional depth from the mother's character adds real weight. What surprised me was the well-timed comedy-it lightens the mood without feeling forced. The actors have done a fantastic job; their performances feel natural and heartfelt, especially the leads who share great chemistry. A beautiful mix of romance, emotion, and laughter. Hero , heroine performance is to good and hero friends , Vilan friends acting nice main movie writing is excellent 👌
When the credits finally rolled on Kousalya Tanaya Ragava, I wasn't sure if I had just watched a film or survived an ancient form of torture repackaged for the modern audience. Either way, one thing was clear: this movie is a masterclass in how not to make cinema.
Let's start with the plot - or rather, the tangled mess pretending to be one. Kousalya Tanaya Ragava seems to be based on a mythological premise, but it quickly devolves into a confusing, directionless expedition into the land of clichés. It's as if the writers took every tired trope from historical dramas, shook them in a bag, and dumped them onto the script without a second thought. The result? A story that moves slower than continental drift but somehow manages to trip over itself at every step.
The characters are cardboard cutouts at best. Our protagonist, Ragava, is presumably meant to be a noble, stoic hero, but thanks to some truly lifeless acting, he comes across more like a slightly bored museum tour guide. You could replace him with a marble statue and nobody would notice. Kousalya, the other half of the title, fares no better. She's supposedly a strong, inspirational figure, but mostly spends the film delivering long, meaningless monologues that feel less like dialogue and more like punishment.
As for the villain - well, I assume there was one? It's hard to tell when every character seems equally confused about what they're doing. Even the background extras look like they're desperately scanning for an exit sign.
Visually, Kousalya Tanaya Ragava is an assault on the senses. The cinematography is so aggressively bright and color-saturated that I genuinely thought I was going blind halfway through. Every scene is bathed in the kind of blinding gold light you usually reserve for dreams, hallucinations, or eye exams. Special mention must be made of the CGI, which looks like it was ripped from a 2003 PC game and then forgotten in a basement for two decades.
But the real crown jewel of incompetence here is the music. In a film that desperately needed any form of emotional engagement, the soundtrack instead offers shrill, over-the-top chanting that kicks in at all the wrong times. Epic battle scene? Cue sleepy flute music. Quiet emotional moment? Hit it with a full-on orchestra like the building's on fire. It's like the composer didn't watch the movie and just guessed.
Pacing? Don't even get me started. The movie moves at such a glacial pace that I'm pretty sure I saw a tree grow to full maturity during the second act. Entire scenes drag on for minutes without anything - and I mean anything - happening. It's not "slow cinema," it's no cinema.
Directorial choices are baffling throughout. There are long, lingering close-ups of feet for no apparent reason. Random slow-motion shots of people blinking. An entire scene dedicated to two characters dramatically picking fruit. It's like the director lost a bet and had to fill two hours without using a coherent script.
By the time Kousalya Tanaya Ragava limps toward its so-called climax, most audience members are either asleep, emotionally broken, or plotting how to sue for damages. The grand finale - if you can call it that - fizzles out with all the energy of a wet campfire, leaving viewers wondering if anything they just endured actually mattered.
In conclusion, Kousalya Tanaya Ragava is not just a bad movie - it's a cautionary tale. It's what happens when ambition meets incompetence and neither bothers to bring a map. If you're looking for entertainment, look elsewhere. If you're looking for a cure for insomnia, however, this might just be the masterpiece you've been waiting for.
Let's start with the plot - or rather, the tangled mess pretending to be one. Kousalya Tanaya Ragava seems to be based on a mythological premise, but it quickly devolves into a confusing, directionless expedition into the land of clichés. It's as if the writers took every tired trope from historical dramas, shook them in a bag, and dumped them onto the script without a second thought. The result? A story that moves slower than continental drift but somehow manages to trip over itself at every step.
The characters are cardboard cutouts at best. Our protagonist, Ragava, is presumably meant to be a noble, stoic hero, but thanks to some truly lifeless acting, he comes across more like a slightly bored museum tour guide. You could replace him with a marble statue and nobody would notice. Kousalya, the other half of the title, fares no better. She's supposedly a strong, inspirational figure, but mostly spends the film delivering long, meaningless monologues that feel less like dialogue and more like punishment.
As for the villain - well, I assume there was one? It's hard to tell when every character seems equally confused about what they're doing. Even the background extras look like they're desperately scanning for an exit sign.
Visually, Kousalya Tanaya Ragava is an assault on the senses. The cinematography is so aggressively bright and color-saturated that I genuinely thought I was going blind halfway through. Every scene is bathed in the kind of blinding gold light you usually reserve for dreams, hallucinations, or eye exams. Special mention must be made of the CGI, which looks like it was ripped from a 2003 PC game and then forgotten in a basement for two decades.
But the real crown jewel of incompetence here is the music. In a film that desperately needed any form of emotional engagement, the soundtrack instead offers shrill, over-the-top chanting that kicks in at all the wrong times. Epic battle scene? Cue sleepy flute music. Quiet emotional moment? Hit it with a full-on orchestra like the building's on fire. It's like the composer didn't watch the movie and just guessed.
Pacing? Don't even get me started. The movie moves at such a glacial pace that I'm pretty sure I saw a tree grow to full maturity during the second act. Entire scenes drag on for minutes without anything - and I mean anything - happening. It's not "slow cinema," it's no cinema.
Directorial choices are baffling throughout. There are long, lingering close-ups of feet for no apparent reason. Random slow-motion shots of people blinking. An entire scene dedicated to two characters dramatically picking fruit. It's like the director lost a bet and had to fill two hours without using a coherent script.
By the time Kousalya Tanaya Ragava limps toward its so-called climax, most audience members are either asleep, emotionally broken, or plotting how to sue for damages. The grand finale - if you can call it that - fizzles out with all the energy of a wet campfire, leaving viewers wondering if anything they just endured actually mattered.
In conclusion, Kousalya Tanaya Ragava is not just a bad movie - it's a cautionary tale. It's what happens when ambition meets incompetence and neither bothers to bring a map. If you're looking for entertainment, look elsewhere. If you're looking for a cure for insomnia, however, this might just be the masterpiece you've been waiting for.
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- Durée2 heures 27 minutes
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