Uyire Uyire marks the debut of Siddhu, the son of veteran actress Jaya Prada. Directed by A.R. Rajasekar, Uyire Uyire is a remake of the Telugu film Ishq, which was made by Vikram Kumar, who is now awaiting the release of his Suriya starrer '24'. Hansika Motwani has romanced Siddhu in this flick with Aadukalam Naren, Chaya Singh and Rohini forming the rest of the cast.
The film sees the lead pair getting to know each other during an accidental trip to Goa. Though things start sour, in due course, love blossoms between the two. The story takes a twist when Siddhu finds out that Hansika's brother, played by Ajay, is the one with whom he had a spat with when Ajay used to love-torture Siddhu's sister (played by Chaya Singh) during her college days. How Siddhu crosses this hurdle in the form of Ajay and whether he gets Hansika's hand in the end forms the crux of this film.
Hansika is in her comfort zone as a bubbly girl and scores with her cute expressions. Siddhu, on the other hand, looks completely out of place and his lip sync is miserable. Cinematographer R.D. Rajasekhar has done a decent job and the shots look colourful. The songs though, aren't up to the mark and end up being speed-breakers which disrupt the film's flow.
Overall, Uyire Uyire is a flick that tests one's patience and questions the audience's intelligence. Even if there aren't any other options, this film is highly recommended to be skipped.
The film sees the lead pair getting to know each other during an accidental trip to Goa. Though things start sour, in due course, love blossoms between the two. The story takes a twist when Siddhu finds out that Hansika's brother, played by Ajay, is the one with whom he had a spat with when Ajay used to love-torture Siddhu's sister (played by Chaya Singh) during her college days. How Siddhu crosses this hurdle in the form of Ajay and whether he gets Hansika's hand in the end forms the crux of this film.
Hansika is in her comfort zone as a bubbly girl and scores with her cute expressions. Siddhu, on the other hand, looks completely out of place and his lip sync is miserable. Cinematographer R.D. Rajasekhar has done a decent job and the shots look colourful. The songs though, aren't up to the mark and end up being speed-breakers which disrupt the film's flow.
Overall, Uyire Uyire is a flick that tests one's patience and questions the audience's intelligence. Even if there aren't any other options, this film is highly recommended to be skipped.