A middle-class worker named Venkata Ramana (Rao Ramesh) resides with his grown son Krishna (Sundeep Kishan). They are scared to entrust their daughter to a household without a woman, thus he is turned down despite his best attempts to locate a suitable union for his son.
 
Therefore, before finding a partner for his son, Venkata ramana chooses to be married again.  His life is changed by a chance meeting with Yashoda (Anshu), and he is enamored with her beauty.  She turns down his offers and is getting ready to travel to the US.  However, his son krishna develops feelings for meera (Ritu Varma), a college student.


Yashoda and meera finally consent to the father-son combination in the narrative twist, but they later encounter an unforeseen problem with their marriage.  How do Yashoda and meera know each other, and how will this father and son settle their dispute?
 

Sundeep Kishan has played a part that fits his character.  Although his performance in the last emotional scenes is praiseworthy, he is his typical self. Although rao ramesh doesn't seem appropriate next to Anshu, the comedy originally succeeded there. However, the love scenes and duets with anshu don't work.
 
With the exception of one or two situations, Sundeep and Rao Ramesh's alleged comic exchanges have mostly fallen flat. Ritu varma is only sufficient.  Anshu seems to be a good fit for this return endeavor.  Murali Sharma has once again given an amazing performance.
 

Leon james provided two appealing songs, "Baby Ma" and "Sommasillu Pothunnave," but he did not provide an adequate soundtrack to elevate the story.  There is enough cinematography.  While a few additional authors have been given credit alongside prasanna Kumar, the writing is still somewhat mediocre, and while some of the humorous parts made people chuckle, most of them fell flat.  For a movie in this category, the production qualities are high.  

Overall, "Mazaka" is not as extravagantly entertaining as Trinadha Rao's other films since it has a lot of repetitive plot and few comedic moments. Nevertheless, the whole package and the last scenes make it a passable viewing.
 
 


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