Evaru movie review: An intriguing movie where the lies live in the details.
- Rasmi Tangirala
- Jul 2, 2020
- 2 min read
Updated: Jul 9, 2024
Adivi Sesh manages to surprise the audience every time with his low-budget, high-quality movies, and he did it again with Evaru. Every ten minutes, there seemed to be some new element added to the story that would make your brain really think. It brought you back to the beginning of the story.

I got really confused when I watched it the first time. We went to the theater to watch Evaru for my sister's birthday, but we went straight from marching band rehearsal, and I was really tired. I understood bits and pieces, but I didn't really understand how the whole thing fit together. When I watched it a second time, I understood it all properly.
The screenplay was one element that held the story together. The 2 main places that the movie was shot- in the hotel room, and in Coonoor- helped the movie stick together without leaving the audience too confused. The dialogues about the truth and the lies were great, too. It was like a perspective change in the middle of a cut-and-dry case that made you wonder how cut-and-dry it really was.

I don't know how true-to the-original this movie was because I didn't see the original (The Invisible Guest), but I did see Badla (in bits and pieces though, because I fell asleep in the middle), and I'm pretty sure it is as close as it can get.
I feel like this movie didn't get as much hype or love as it should've gotten. It released a couple weeks after Rakshasudu, and a couple weeks before Saaho, which is probably why it became an underrated movie. Maybe if the cast was different, it would have drawn more people.
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