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Prabhas Evaluates Dasara Played By Nani, Gushes; We Should Do More Films Like This

Prabhas wrote a review on Nani's Dasara. Nani portrays the role of Dharani in the film, which was directed by Odella Srikanth, a debutant.
by Xappie Desk | April 03, 2023 16:49 IST
Prabhas Evaluates Dasara Played By Nani, Gushes; We Should Do More Films Like This

Prabhas has praised the Nani-starrer Dasara, which is on track to become the first Rs. 100 crore-grossing movies of his career. Prabhas provided a review of the movie on his Instagram Stories. In his post congratulating the Dasara team, Prabhas expressed his desire for more movies like Dasara to be created. Nani praised Prabhas for his remarks while reposting the story on his Instagram Stories.

 
Prabhas shared the poster and wrote, “Just saw #Dasara. What a film. I loved it. Congrats to @nameisnani for doing this film. Nani, the director @srikanthodela__ , @keerthysureshofficial and the whole team did a great job. We should do more films like this! (clapping hands emojis)." Nani reposted Prabhas' story and wrote, "Thank you Prabhas anna @actorprabhas (red heart emoji)."
 
Nani portrays Dharani in the film Dasara, which was directed by the debutant Odella Srikanth. The story of rebellion, retaliation, and friendship in the movie is well known. Shining Tom Chacko, Dheekshith Shetty, and Keerthy Suresh also had significant parts in it.
 
Dasara was initially filmed in Telugu and afterward made available in Tamil, Hindi, Malayalam, and Kannada. The film's grounded setting and Srikanth's ability to take the audience to a previously unseen environment of a coal-laden hamlet definitely work in the film's favour.
 
Nani discussed the current pan-Indian wave in a pre-release interview. He claimed that just because a movie is released in several languages doesn't mean it is an all-Indian project. According to him, the audience's acceptance is what gives a movie its true pan-Indian status.
 
Nani told HT, “Dasara is a Telugu film which we felt will appeal to audiences across languages. Hence, we decided to release it in multiple languages. Dasara is set in a world that’ll be alien to Telugu as well as Hindi audiences. That’s what makes this film unique. A film doesn’t become pan-Indian just by being released in five languages".
 
When Baahubali 1 was released, it wasn’t a pan-Indian film. After audiences lapped up the first part in a big way, the hype around the second part grew manifolds, and that naturally made Baahubali 2 a truly pan-Indian project. It’s the same case with the KGF series and Pushpa. Audiences make a film pan-Indian with their acceptance,” he added.


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