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Vyavastha Review – Interesting Premise With Sloppy Execution

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What Is the Story About?

On the first night of Yamini, she is seen with a gun in her hands and her dead husband before her. The best lawyer in the town, Avinash Chakraborthy, cuts a deal with the husband’s family to put her behind bars.

Vamsi Krishna, a junior under Avinash Chakraborthy, takes up the case, which is straightforward. He goes against his boss and fights the system to save Yamini. Did he succeed? Did Yamily kill her husband? The answers to these questions form the series’ core story.

Performances?

Karthik Rathnam as Vamsi Krishna plays the hero kind of role but with a better-developed character arc, one that has him grow from an underdog against a mighty opponent.

The character’s idealistic side is neatly presented by Karthik. The dialogue delivery is neat, and the helplessness can be felt via the stammering trait. One wishes it was better incorporated into the proceedings and utilised. When it comes to intensity in drama and emotional moments, he comes across as lacking. It feels as if he is rushing through them.

Hebah Patel is a mixed bag. She has a sad expression, mostly with an unconvincing fearful voice and body shivers. A couple of scenes had scope to show her acting side, but they were poorly directed to make any impact. It is not a series where looks matter, but she seems to put on a little weight.

Analysis

Anand Ranga of Oye fame directs Vyavastha. It is a procedural drama with a crime angle. The backdrop is a law firm with one fighting for justice against powerful people.

The story of Vyavastha does offer intrigue that is evident from the start itself. It is also apparent that some sort of research has gone into the content. There are details in the proceedings that are neatly incorporated into the story.

However, when it comes to the direction and the screenplay, Vyavastha falls short. The raw grit that is essential in the narrative is never seen. The police interrogation sequences, for example, or the scenes in the jail, clearly highlight the problem. They look so amateurish, more so as the real intent behind them is entirely apparent.

The screenplay gives a sluggish feeling to the proceedings. The content before and after a twist arrives looks flat and boring. The entire flashback involving the hero is a case in point. The first episode itself highlights the issue as nothing exciting happens after an intriguing start and before the end.

The combination of poor direction and weak screenplay makes the eight-episode series look very lengthy than it actually is.

Again, there are neat twists at regular intervals which keeps one interested. The key here is the central murder mystery involving Yamini and its investigation process. It ends on a mixed note that leans more on the disappointing side than satisfactory. It is mainly to do with how its executed and revealed. It is sloppily handled and rushed.

Towards the end, we also get a glimpse of the next season. It shifts focus on the firm entirely, which might help evoke some enthusiasm.

Overall, Vyavastha has an interesting plot, but its execution is weak. The drama lacks bite despite the visible opportunity. Give it a try if you like procedural dramas with a crime angle, but keep the expectations firmly in check.

Other Artists?

Vyavastha has a good number of supporting cast. However, most of them, barring Sampath have bits and pieces roles. Sampath easily towers over everyone with his act. We have seen him do it all before, but he still manages to make it look fresh. It also helps that different emotions are displayed, although it makes for an uneven tone narrative-wise.

Kamna Jetmalani is seen after a long gap in a decent role. She could have been utilised better. Gururaj, Sukrutha and Shivani also suffer from the same problem with half-baked and underwritten parts.

Music and Other Departments?

Naresh Kumaran’s background score is adequate. Some parts don’t go well with the tone, though. Anil Bandari’s cinematography is par for the course for a mid-scale web series production. The law firm sequences had the scope for slick presentation, but nothing of that sort is seen. The editing lacks smoothness and gives a patchy feel to the narrative. The writing is below par most of the time. The courtroom proceedings lack the bite as a result.

Highlights?

Story

Setting

Frequent Twists

Drawbacks?

Direction

Screenplay

Length

Did I Enjoy It?

SYes, in parts

Will You Recommend It?

Yes, with reservations

Vyavastha Telugu Web Series Review by Binged Bureau 

The post Vyavastha Review – Interesting Premise With Sloppy Execution appeared first on Binged.


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