r/fuckTollywood

Moddalo TFI

Moddalo TFI

It’s either all scrap movies, no movies getting released, or movies getting delayed for no reason.

Unnecessary ticket hikes, poor writing, and bad execution.

Interest eh denguthundhi.

I'm not asking for some interstellar or godfather range movies,just Make Good movies man

Non existing north market kosam,10% audience ni satisfy cheyaniki endhuku ra you're making unappealable films which are for no one?

u/nenokkadine_the1 — 6 days ago
▲ 207 r/fuckTollywood+2 crossposts

Does anyone know why bhAAi has that same kerchief visibly tucked in his pocket in mostly all scenes of Alavaikuntapuram lo?

Do you guys thinks its some kind of belief/superstition? What must be the reason?

u/qwerty_0123456 — 5 days ago

The character in the movie healed, but the actor didn’t....

Plz Don’t say that she reduced weight after the movie, etc. Yeah, she did, but that sudden transformation affected her body, and she still hasn’t fully recovered from it. Eventually, she kind of disappeared from being socially active, and in a recent interview (the Ghaati radio interview), she mentioned that she’s not even attending family events 🙏

u/Ok-Investment373 — 6 days ago

I have to clean my eyes

I just posted that vikramrakudu movie is disgusting

(Ante that is the post)

Here is a comment which blew my mind

u/Queasy_Tank6204 — 5 days ago
▲ 304 r/fuckTollywood+1 crossposts

Different Endings in Tamil & Telugu Cinema. Is It Audience Preference or Industry Culture?

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I’ve noticed an interesting pattern while watching Tamil and Telugu versions/remakes of the same films.

A few examples:

* *Gharshana* / *Kaakha Kaakha* — Jyotika’s character dies in the Tamil version, but Asin’s character survives in the Telugu version.

* *Vinnaithaandi Varuvaayaa* / *Ye Maaya Chesave* — Jessie marries someone else and asks Karthik to move on. The ending feels emotionally unresolved and bittersweet.

* *Rowthiram* (Jiiva–Shriya movie) — Shriya’s character dies in Tamil, but in Telugu she survives.

* *Temper* — NTR eventually gets a heroic payoff and personally kills the villains after being proven innocent.

* *Ayogya* (Vishal remake) — the ending is much darker and more realistic. Vishal dies, and only after his death is he proven innocent.

* Even *Tagore* differs from the Tamil original *Ramanaa*, where the hero is actually sentenced to death and hanged.

This made me think:

Do Telugu audiences generally prefer emotionally reassuring endings compared to Tamil audiences?

Because in Tamil cinema, morally grey or painful endings seem more accepted:

* Heroes fail

* Lovers separate

* Main characters die

* Justice is incomplete or emotionally uncomfortable

But Telugu commercial cinema often seems to prefer:

* emotional closure

* heroic redemption

* audience satisfaction

* “hero elevation”

Even critically acclaimed films sometimes get altered endings for the Telugu audience.

And interestingly, movies like *Theeran* became major successes in Tamil, while *Khakee* didn’t connect as strongly in Telugu despite being the same film.

So what do you think is the core reason?

* Audience psychology?

* Star culture?

* Fan expectations?

* Distributor pressure?

* Family audience preferences?

* Or just different storytelling traditions between Kollywood and Tollywood?

Not saying one industry is better than the other. Just curious about why these storytelling differences exist so consistently across remakes and dubbed versions.

u/Own_Elk8276 — 2 days ago

YouTube channel(s) (movies related) which you've unfollowed

Meeku ilaanti feeling kaliginchina channels to be specific.....

Can be of any industry/language

u/almachemist — 3 days ago