- The heartfelt finale of Meet Cute shines out.
- The men are utterly charming in all five of the stories.
- They interfere with the viewer’s ability to enjoy the show with high anticipation
Are there any similarities among the five “Meet Cute” episodes? There may be a few motifs found, however, an unintentional (?) element doesn’t go unnoticed.
]The men are utterly charming in all five of the stories. They interfere with the viewer’s ability to enjoy the show with high anticipation due to their miraculous deliciousness.
The most recent episode, “Ex-Girl Friend,” is notable for its subtle depiction of a character’s inner conflict expressing itself as social clumsiness. After a dinner date goes awry, two women (Sunainaa and Sanchitha Poonacha) sit on a beach in the breeze and discuss Ajay (Govind Padmasoorya).
As the 30-minute show progresses, the viewer’s opinion of Ajay changes. The lesson about embracing flaws resonates with people. A slice-of-life dialogue between a father and his devoted daughter is also shown in this part.
The second-best episode is “In L(AW)OVE,” in which Rohini’s natural reactions and body language deepen. She is the second recent “Oke Oka Jeevitham” mother after Amani who is so unpolished on TV.
Her first reaction is to be upset that her devoted son has a secret life when she sees him walking with a young woman (Aakanksha Singh) on the street. She is slightly troubled by what she must learn from a stranger in a veterinary clinic, but she is not angry. It hits you hard when someone says, “Relationships that make you feel lonely are more terrible than loneliness itself.”
Despite the welcome remark on how female actors dread sexual harassment in ostensibly innocent settings, “Star Struck” suffers from plain writing. Adah Sharma portrays a leading lady who eventually moves in with Shiva Kandukuri’s character, a male doctor who is not aware of her fame. She enjoys how well-organized his apartment is and savors the nostalgic journal entries. It’s all too dreamy as he flirts with her in an overt manner on a rainy night. Although not forced, the idea of “enjoying the silences as much as the dialogues” feels dull.
“Meet The Boy” and “Old Is Gold” have to be the weakest ones. The first film is about a soon-to-be married couple, Swathi (Varsha Bollamma) and Abhi (Ashwin Kumar), who attempt to overcome their initial reservations and get to know one another better over a dinner date. The episode merely goes through the motions with rudimentary dialogue and cliched characters. This episode’s music isn’t as catchy as the ones in the earlier episodes.
Regarding “Old Is Gold,” it portrays patience as the magic wand that can be used in any personal situation, making temper outbursts and mood swings seem insignificant. A chance encounter between an elderly man (Sathyaraj) and a young working woman (Ruhani Sharma) at a consulate is intended to emphasize the value of intimacy. This tired cliché doesn’t help: a devoted old couple who have grown past trivial arguments and regular fights.
Title: Meet Cute
Cast: Sathyaraj, Rohini and others
Director: Deepthi Ganta
Run-Time: Approximately 150 minutes
Streaming on: SonyLIV
Language: Telugu
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