3G Love Movie Reviews
Starring | Siddharth Varma, Joshi Ram, Neelima, Sravani |
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Music | Shekar Chandra |
Director | Govardhan Krishna |
Producer | Pratap Kumar Kolagatla |
Year | 2013 |
Rating |
3G Love Review
by MyMazaa.com3G love shows that girls staying in hostels have no other work except discussing boys and boys have nothing to think about except following the fair sex. The director generalises the film on a whole, he presumes all the girls and guys are interested in sex and nothing at all. He cannot fool the censor board with the scenes so he showed all his talent in using profanity and it is at its peak.
3G Love is about half a dozen hostel girls and ten boys. Instead of studies, the girls focus is on boys and the discussions revolve around sex. They have many doubts and they are outrageous, for example, is it enough if we fall in love or do we need to marry the boy, for love to develop do we need to get onto a dunlop bed? And whom do they ask these questions? A man hater has answers for all these, she gives them a big lecture and asks the two groups to assemble at the college auditorium. Why are you loving me alone? Will you marry me? Are you fresh? These are the questions and none of the guys answer them in a straight manner. They give haphazard answers in a casual way like you chat with people in a bus stop, what happens later on forms the story.
For this story, the director has trusted his visualisation more than the dialogues. Does one vomit for the first time, does the hips bulge at the sides? We stand and pee, can you do that? He keeps going this way and there is no end to vulgarity. Director Venkapathy Raju has not written the screenplay properly and that is because he has no proper story. He might have felt the discussion between a boy and a girl is a crucial and a new point. But that turned out to be a big minus for the film.The debate goes on college walls or on the roads near the bus stop but there is no matter in it. In the first half he shows women as falling and cheap and in the second he shows them pouncing at them. Finally the dose of abuses or accusations as you may call it fell more on the females. Though the visualisation, mixing and cinematography is good, what is the point when there is no script?
Shekar Chandra’s music sounds good outside the theatre. Yedho Something song is good but the picturisation kills it. The artistes are new, they are young. They speak their daily lingo, their clothes, mannerisms nothing novel, ditto with girls. What is the point of having so many womens wings and students associations when such cheap films release every week and reduce the values of the youth in the society