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Keep in mind the caption of Mungaru Male and watch 'Hani Hani'- Review Movie:- Hani Hani
College romances and love-struck couples facing trouble from their families are not new to Sandalwood and Hani, Hani is just another addition to the genre but with a subtle differences. Sharan dwells on complex human relationships and pitches Hani, Hani around the concept of a joint family. The first half of the move hovers around the college and Ramya (Pooja Gandhi) falls in love with Rahul (Tarun) through a mishmash of other students' love stories and a bit of machismo. The second half moves on to a melodrama that highlights the virtues of a joint family. Treated with humour and candy-floss screenplay before the interval, it certainly is a difficult task for the audience to suddenly be flooded with family emotions. However, even if we assume that the viewer manages to digest the sudden drift in narration, the relentless flow of glycerin by Sharan is disturbing , nonetheless. Despite the tearful family saga that vacillates endlessly around the love affair, lively performances by the veterans and new age actors catches the audience's attention. Tarun looks very much a body next door. He sports a stubble, and scores with his acting skills. Pooja gets full marks for her zippy performance, compared to hear earlier flicks, the actress seems to have put on a some weight and appears too old for the role. Her acting carries her through though. Rangayana Raghu is refreshing though he loses track intermittently. Sharan's idea of utilizing veterans like Dattatreya, Lokanath, Kishori Ballal, Jai Jagadesh and Bhavya has certainly made the movie more meaningful. You take back with you Chinna's work, specially the two numbers Hani, Hani and beda.
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