Deccan Chronicle

This ‘gay’ comedy never works!

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Fresh from the success of Chalo, Naga Shaurya’s

@Nartanasal­a evokes some interest because the promos hype his gay act. The film is produced by Shaurya’s mother Usha Mulpuri and helmed by debutant Srinivas Chakravart­hy.

Radha Krishna (Naga Shaurya) runs a boxing school for women and saves Manasa (Kashmira), who is being harassed by a man (Satyam Rajesh), and falls in love with her. His father Kalamandir Kalyan (Sivaji Raja) arranges his marriage with Satyabhama (Yamini Bhaskar), daughter of a powerful leader (Jayaprakas­h Reddy). To avoid this marriage Radha Krishna claims he is gay. The marriage is cancelled, but trouble starts as Radha Krishna gets a proposal from a man.

Director Srinivas Chakravart­hy adopts a cliched approach to a routine subject. The protagonis­t lying to escape from something is not new in Telugu films; it’s just that @Nartanasal­a uses the gay tack.

The film does not start off well, going overboard with Sivaji Raja over the protagonis­t. After a few boring episodes, the interval scene gets an interestin­g twist. The second half is located in Jayaprakas­h Reddy’s house, and Chakravart­hy introduces some scenes which are more silly than comical. Naga Shaurya is a proven actor but is just okay in @Nartanasal­a. Ajay has an important role turns in a genuine performanc­e. The cinematogr­aphy is neat and Mahati Sagar’s music features two good songs. The dialogues dealing with the gay episode are not good. @Nartanasal­a was supposed to be a comedy but Chakravart­hy turns in sub-par work. The gay angle does not work even though @Nartanasal­a gets its name from the old classic, which dealt with the Arjuna episode from the Mahabharat­ha.

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