
The sunrise at Kanyakumari as Thanu Nenu plays in the background, the guitar riffs as Rajinikanth conquers his fears, the melodies when he confesses his love – you’ll be left with moments to take home, all thanks to right music at the right time. It probably would’ve been better if the story unravelled steadily over the span of 2 and a half hours, rather.Īlthough the audience have had enough time to stew in the music given by Rahman, the visuals added to them in the movie only makes it a whole new experience all over again. You’ll keep waiting for answers and all of them are answered in a 5 minute scene in the climax, as Rajinikanth narrates it. You’ll want to relate to Divya and Rajinikanth’s turmoil as you watch the pacy scenes but you have no information to do so. The second half has a lot happening and the audience are just as confused as the characters in the movie. Not much else happens in the first half, and it almost borders on boredom. So the moments in the sequences between Naga Chaitanya and Manjima will leave you with something you’d want to share and discuss with your loved one later. And by action, I mean guns, murders, rogue cops – the works. While the first half is mostly dedicated to romance, the second half is unexpectedly action-packed. Movie Review: With those spellbinding visuals, that enchanting Rahman music and Chinmayi’s trademark voice, Saahasam Swaasaga Saagipo recreates the magic which you would expect of a Goutham Menon movie.

After a series of deaths, he decides to rise above fear and take control of the situation.

Rajinikanth makes way to Kolhapur to check on Divya and ends up in a whirlpool of crime, conspiracy and life-threatening circumstances. They meet with an orchestrated accident which lands the two in the hospital where Divya leaves him to tend to her parents who get attacked by goons. Story: Rajinikanth (Naga Chaitanya) takes off on a road trip with his sister’s friend, Divya (Manjima Mohan).
