Netru Indru Naalai (transl. Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow) is a 2008 Indian Tamil-language film produced by Nukarapu Surya Prakasa Rao and directed by Lakshmikant Chenna. The film stars Ravi Krishna and Rekha Vedavyas (credited as Akshara).[1] The film was simultaneously made in Telugu as Ninna Nedu Repu. The music was composed by Anil, and the film released on 9 October 2008.

Plot

A dejected youth Vetri / Vijay decides to end his life on a railway track. On the tracks, he sees the dead body of a youth called Kishore and takes away his mobile phone. The call he attends over the phone brings him fortune. He gets richer, and money starts coming to him from all quarters. Fate takes a different turn. A baddie in the city, Moddu Poorana, calls up and threatens Vetri / Vijay. On other hand, a new girl named Swapna, who knew Kishore but never met him, also enters Vetri / Vijay's life. How Vetri / Vijay manages to put together the pieces of his new life and escape from the deadly goons forms rest of the story.

Cast

Actor (Tamil) Actor (Telugu) Role (Tamil) Role (Telugu)
Ravi Krishna Vetri Vijay
Akshara Swapna
Nassar
Ajay Poorana Moddu Poorana
Karunas Venu Madhav
Brahmanandam
Soumya Bollapragada
Uttej Vamsi Krishna
Jenny
Tamannaah Bhatia Varsha (cameo appearance)

Production

The film is directed by Lakshimikant Chenna, who previously directed Hyderabad Nawabs (2006).[2]

Music

The music was composed by Anil R. and released by Aditya Music.

Tamil tracklist[3]
  • "Kase" - Ranjith, Nithin
  • "Netru Indru" - Deepu
  • "Oru Naalo" - Ranjith
  • "Aasai" - Priya, Sayonara
  • "Ethetho" - Gowtham
Telugu tracklist[4]
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Ninna Nedu Repu"Krishna ChaitanyaDeepu2:37
2."Vayasey Theliyani"Krishna ChaitanyaRanjith, Nithiin4:32
3."Oohallo"VeturiGautham Bharadwaj, Harshika1:47
4."Thadi Vedi"VeturiRanjith, Harshika4:35
5."Jil Jil Javani"VeturiSayonara, Priya Himesh3:43
6."Theme" Instrumental2:14
Total length:19:28

Release and reception

The film was ready for release in February 2008 but was delayed.[5]

The Times of India wrote "A couple of minuses like that, however, doesn't stop the film from being moderately entertaining".[6] Behindwoods wrote "Netru Indru Naalai seems like a mish mash of many Tamil movies (old and new) cooked in excessively greasy gravy of crude dialogues and a story of loser-hero-stumbling-upon-his-fortune-accidentally."[7] Indiaglitz wrote "The credit goes in entirety to director Lakshmikanth, who has managed to infuse all ingredients that would appease action-buffs, at the same time will lure youngsters to the cinema halls."[8]

References

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