Ramya krishna plays Vasundhara, a minister who is the daughter of Vyra Venkata Swamy (Prakash Raj). She divorces Satyam (Jayaram) and marries Rao Ramesh. She keeps her eldest son, Ramana (Maheshbabu), isolated from the family. Venkata Swamy and his friends seek to compel ramana into signing a statement surrendering all claims to the family's wealth. The story revolves around Ramana's ideas for countering these techniques, as well as the chance of reconciliation between mother and son.

Guntur Kaaram, unlike top heroes' commercial flicks, sets off as a family narrative. That is a positive omen, but it fades as the film proceeds. In the first half, the filmmaker relies mainly on Mahesh's portrayal, and the picture is rather enjoyable. The second half is shallow, and uninspiring. This is Trivikram's weak follow-up to Agnathavaasi.

Guntur Kaaram is a very mediocre film at best. Mahesh Babu's personality, language delivery, and dances redeem the picture to some extent. The first half was adequate, but the second half failed to meet expectations. Trivikram's signature does not appear anywhere. The mother's sympathy may benefit certain families, but it is insufficient. This film has the lowest production costs of any Maheshbabu film by a significant amount!

The first part of guntur Kaaram is decent, thanks mostly to Mahesh's comedic timing and gallantry. The interval is fine. However, the second half was a total collapse. guntur Kaaram is primarily reliant on Mahesh's enthusiasm, despite a poor narrative and weak emotions. There are a few moments and dances that fans will like. However, the film lacks the necessary spice to compete in the sankranti race.

Overall, NOT SPICY ENOUGH!


Ratings:  ⭐⭐☆

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