Manasuku Nachindi (transl. The heart likes it) is a 2018 Indian Telugu-language romantic drama film directed by debutante Manjula Ghattamaneni. It is jointly produced by Sanjay Swaroop and P. Kiran under his banner Anandi Art Creations. It features Sundeep Kishan, Amyra Dastur, Tridha Choudhury, and Adith Arun in the lead roles. Music was directed by Radhan. Dialogues in the film were written by Sai Madhav Burra. Released on 16 February 2018, the film failed to perform at the box office.[1]
Manasuku Nachindi | |
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![]() Film poster | |
Directed by | Manjula Ghattamaneni |
Written by | Manjula Ghattamaneni |
Produced by | Sanjay Swaroop P. Kiran |
Starring | Sundeep Kishan Amyra Dastur Tridha Choudhury Adith Arun |
Cinematography | Ravi Yadav |
Music by | Radhan |
Production companies | Anandi Art Creations Indira Productions |
Distributed by | Sri Venkateswara Films |
Release date |
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Country | India |
Language | Telugu |
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The soundtrack of Manasuku Nachindi was composed by Radhan. Released through Aditya Music, all the songs were written by Ananta Sriram.[2]
Manasuku Nachindi | ||||
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Soundtrack album by Radhan | ||||
Released | 2018 | |||
Recorded | 2018 | |||
Genre | Feature film soundtrack | |||
Length | 21:02 | |||
Language | Telugu | |||
Label | Aditya Music | |||
Producer | Radhan | |||
Radhan chronology | ||||
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Track | Song | Singer(s) | Duration |
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01 | "Parichayamu leda" | Sameera Bharadwaj | 03:04 |
02 | "Rey Idi Nee Jaaga" | Yazin Nizar, Ramya NSK | 03:50 |
03 | "Ra Ra Ilara" | Haricharan | 04:50 |
04 | "Oh Pilla Nuv Pooladanda" | Naresh Iyer, Sameera Bharadwaj | 03:40 |
05 | "Chatu Matu Chupulanni" | Srinivas Raghunathan | 02:10 |
06 | "Gadichina Prathi Rojuni" | Shweta Mohan | 03:28 |
The film was initially scheduled to release on 26 January 2018 but was postponed to 16 February 2018.[3][4]
Hemant Kumar of the Firstpost rated the film 2 out of 5. " the story of Manasuku Nachindhi does have some merit, but it just does not get the cinematic treatment it deserves", Kumar wrote.[5] The Hindu's Srivathsan Nadadhur called the film "old wine in a new bottle." Nadadhur added that "Manasuku Nachindi tries to convey a lot, but all the cushioning that director Manjula does to cover up a stale story comes a cropper in a 150-minute preachy marathon."[6]
Suhas Yellapantula writing for The Times of India rated the film two stars out of five and "Manjula Ghattamaneni makes the film with all the right intentions but falters in its execution." On performances, Yellapantula opined that "Amyra Dastur is the only bright spark in this film, who lights up the screen with a wonderful performance. Sundeep, like the audience, seems confused. Tridha looks good but is overall unconvincing, while Nasser is wasted in a poorly written role."[7]
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