Devara teaser is underwhelming. Salaar suggests we have hit the fatigue phase of the pan-Indian phenomenon. Devara coming immediately after Salaar, with a similar dark theme and design is just a big bore. Even technically, the teaser fails to impress. Visuals of the ocean could have been done far better, the BGM is weird, the lighting and lensing makes the setting look like a stage-set.
That is your opinion. But general audience not required so much technical aspect to cover on , it looks influence them than educating them. This is not anymore Avatar or Bahubali budget . Even For glimpse you think its bore. Whole move required drama emotion and technical aspects. It’s so early to judge everything.
@@polurybhanuprakash1511Everything is an opinion, and that includes your reply. What else could it be? But unlike what you are implying, opinion does not mean worthless. I never said anything about Avatar budgets, that's a non-sequitur on your part. A few movies, like KGF or Pushpa for example, managed to pique interest with new settings and new technique, without Avatar's budget. Clearly, most movies do not even bother to be ambitious and pan-Indian, and out of the few that try, only a small fraction succeed. Salaar largely failed, now Devara looks like it will follow suit. But then I never had high hopes from Koratala, who's a mediocre storyteller and technician. Also, you underestimate audiences, they are all exposed to international cinema and top-notch shows - that is why the bar is so high for pan-Indian successes. We live in a time when the average cinegoer talks about camera and BGM in public reviews outside theaters. An exciting teaser will grab national audiences immediately, Animal's teasers are testament to this.