Bhartha Mahasayulaku Wignyapthi is a 2026 Telugu-language romantic comedy and family drama written and directed by Kishore Tirumala. The film has Ravi Teja, Ashika Ranganath & Dimple Hayathi playing the lead roles while Sunil, Satya, Vennala Kishore, Sonia, Getup Srinu, Tarak Ponnappa, Rohan, Muralidhar Goud, Viva Harsha, Ajay Ghosh, & others are seen in important supporting roles. The music is composed by Bheems Ceciroleo, while the film is produced by Sudhakar Cherukuri under SLV Cinemas banner.
Story:
Ram Sathyanarayana (Ravi Teja) is a happy married man leading a wine company along with his wife, Balamani (Dimple Hayathi). After his wine is rejected, Sathya travels to Spain to get approval for his wine. There, he meets Manasa (Ashika Ranganath) and gets pulled into unexpected problems. How will he solve the issues between the two women in his life? Needs to be seen in the film.
What about on-screen performances?
Ravi Teja breaks away from his trademark mass image and plays a stylish character that is family-friendly this time. Though this kind of role isn’t entirely new to him, his natural screen presence, ease in performance, and impeccable comic timing ensure the role remains engaging and thoroughly enjoyable.
Ashika Ranganath as Manasa, the modern girl who meets the hero in Spain, is superb and gives out a neat performance. She fits the role and gets a fresh makeover from the traditional roles she played in her previous films.
Dimple Hayathi, as Balamani, the possessive wife, is equally good with her part. Though her character looks a bit underwritten, she leaves a mark in the few scenes she has. Similar to Ashika, she also gets an image makeover from the glamorous roles she played in her previous films.
Sunil & Vennala Kishore are hilarious in their roles in both halves. All their scenes with Ravi Teja work out well and bring in decent laughs. To be honest, this is Sunil’s funniest role after her comeback to supporting characters.
Sadly, Satya’s comedy is a hit-and-miss in this film. His funny antics might bring in a few laughs, but the comedy written for his role felt forced, over-the-top, and irritating after a point.
Tarak Ponnappa’s role and his portions are the weakest part of the film. This particular tracks add nothing to the overall plot.
Sonia Singh does well as the doubting wife of Sunil, while 90’s kid Rohan leaves a mark as Trinetrudu.
Getup Srinu, Muralidhar Goud, Viva Harsha, Ajay Ghosh, & all others are fine in their limited roles.
What about off-screen talents?
The story by Kishore Tirumala is wafer-thin with a routine and familiar plot line. A married man having an affair and his attempts to not get caught by his wife is a routine formula that we have seen in many films in the past.
The screenplay is the biggest disappointment of the film. There is a good comedy scene, and right after tha,t we get a couple of flat/routine scenes. The Spain portions in the first half and Tarak Ponnappa’s track in the second half are dull. Also, there are a lot of forced elements to create a mass appeal. For example, the remix song in the pub comes out of nowhere and the dumb charades scene along with Sunil & Sonia’s dance felt completely unnecesary.
Director Kishore Tirumala does a passable job with his presentation, but his narrative remains inconsistent. He picked up a template that worked for the last Sankranthi season and tried to give a new dimension to it, but it did not work as expected. He wanted to give out a simple message to all the married men, but the plot he chose doesn’t make it viable.
The dialogues are not up to the mark. The writers focused more on trending memes to create fun, which never looked organic.
The songs by Bheems Ceciroleo are a mixed bag. Only the mass number Vaammo Vaayyo song impresses while the other songs aren’t upto the mark. The surprise DJ mix is good, but it looks forced into the narrative. Also, his background score is good in parts.
The cinematography by Prasad Murella is excellent. The Spain portions and all the interior scenes are shot in a grand manner.
The edit by A Sreekar Prasad is neat, but a few scenes in the second half could’ve been trimmed.
The artwork by A S Prakash is impressive, and the costumes by Harsha are colorful.
Special mention to Sekhar VJ for the super dance choreography of the Vaammo Vaayyo Song. The dance moves are attractive and will be enjoyed by the masses.
The production values by SLV Cinemas are adequate.
What’s Hot?
* Ravi Teja’s Performance
* Ashika & Dimple’s Performances
* Sunil & Vennela Kishore’s Comedy
* Hilarious Shopping Mall & Hotel Scenes
* Cinematography & Production Values
* Vaammo Vaayyo Song & Decent Background Score
What’s Not?
* Routine Plot & Predictable Screenplay
* Flat Spain Portions & Satya’s Over The Top Comedy
* Tarak Ponnappa’s Character & His Scenes
* Couple Of Unwanted Songs & Their Placement
* Not So Convincing Climax
Verdict: Overall, Bhartha Mahasayulaku Wignyapthi is a very familiar family comedy where a man gets stuck between two women. This is for sure a better film when compared to Ravi Teja’s recent outings, but not a fulfilling one coz of the predictable narrative, forced elements, and wrong packaging. A couple of comedy gags work well with the masses, but the film needed more of these to be a blockbuster this festive season.
Telugubulletin.com Rating: 2.5/5
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Bhartha Mahasayulaku Wignyapthi Review- A Familiar Family Comedy
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