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Lie (film)

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Lie
Theatrical poster
Directed byHanu Raghavapudi
Written byHanu Raghavapudi
Jakka Hariprasad
Produced byRam Achanta
Gopichand Achanta
Anil Sunkara
StarringNithiin
Arjun Sarja
Megha Akash
CinematographyJ. Yuvaraj
Edited byM. S. Rajashekhar Reddy (S. R. Shekhar)
Music byMani Sharma
Production
company
14 Reels Entertainment
Release date
  • 11 August 2017 (2017-08-11)
Running time
141 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageTelugu

LIE: Love Intelligence Enmity is a 2017 Indian Telugu-language action thriller film written & directed by Hanu Raghavapudi and produced by 14 Reels Entertainment. The film stars Nithiin, Arjun Sarja and Megha Akash, while Sriram and Ravi Kishan play supporting roles. The music was composed by Mani Sharma with cinematography by J. Yuvaraj and editing by M. S. Rajashekhar Reddy. The film released on 11 August 2017 to mixed reviews from the critics, with praise for the cast performances (especially Arjun's), story, cinematography, background score, action sequences, editing, and production values but criticism for the screenplay, direction, love track between the main leads, and climax.[1][2]

Plot

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Sathyam (Nithiin) is a good-for-nothing son of a widowed mother (Poornima). He is unemployed and lives off of his late father's (Suresh) monthly pension. He is unmarried and fantasizes about marrying an American girl. By a quirk of fate, Sathyam, along with a stranger named Chaitra (Megha Akash), who has a dream to win a lot of money, end up in Las Vegas, where they decide to only lie with one another. Shortly after, they start to fall in love with one another through their beautiful lies.

At the National Investigation Agency (NIA), a frustrated officer named Bharadwaj (Ravi Kishan) is desperate to nab an elusive criminal named Padmanabham (Arjun Sarja), who has escaped the long arm of the law for 19 years. Padmanabham is a famous Indian ropewalker and magician, but he is also a master of disguise. Thus, the NIA has no idea what he looks like. He is now suspected to be residing in the USA. Bharadwaj has drafted a sharp officer named Aadi (Sriram) to discover Padmanabham's hideout and identity by following a suit which he has purchased and is assumed to have an obsession with. The operation of this mission is called Sholay, implying that Aadi is the showman.

All along, Padmanabham tries to go after the team, which is trying to trace him, only to end up with Sathyam, who was a part of this operation the whole time and the actual showman. Then the cat and mouse game ensures between Padmanabham and Sathyam who lost their most trusted members in the battle including Aadi, and Viswanatham (Nassar) Padmanabham's right hand man in order to protect Padmanabham's identity.

However, Sathyam manages to theft the suit of Padmanabham, and then he gets to know that the suit had implanted with unidentified fingerprints. Then he hides it in secret. Later, Padmanabham turns up under disguise as Bharadwaj reveals it to Satyam that the fingerprints belong to the Indian Army Chief Subratho Roy. Then Padmanabham's plans reveal that he wants to theft the Indian Army weaponry by using his fingerprints. Being a Hand Painting Artist, he gifted his latest hand painting to Padmanabham, and then he sets up a fake theft of his painting sends it to Steve an expert in collect or arranging the fingerprints in an order at Vegas. Then, he successfully transferred it into the suit.

Then, believing he is Bharadwaj, he reveals the whereabouts of the suit. Then Padmanabham recovered the suit and abducts Bharadwaj. Then Sathyam reveals to Padmanabham that the suit is not what he thought off. Then Satyam's past reveals, when Padmanabham is going to leave India. He was disguised as a female bartender to escape from cops used as Satyam's father as his aggressor and escapes with a short edge, Bharadwaj shot him to death on thinking as he is his Criminal later finds out he is an innocent. Then Sathyam announce that he will kill both of them for his father's death. Then Sathyam makes a deal with Padmanabham that the suit against Bharadwaj's life, Then in the final battle Sathyam recognized him as road trick magician Padmanabham and fights him successfully kills him. Then Bharadwaj tries to apologize to him, but Sathyam tells its a fake announcement. he never had any intention to kill him.

Finally film ends with a happy note by Sathyam and Chaitra getting married.

Cast

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Soundtrack

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The music was composed by Mani Sharma and was released on Aditya Music Company.

Lie
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedJune 12, 2017
Recorded2017
GenreSoundtrack
Length16:38
LabelAditya Music
ProducerMani Sharma
Mani Sharma chronology
Aaradugula Bullet
(2017)
Lie
(2017)
Balakrishnudu
(2017)
Track list
No.TitleLyricsSinger(s)Length
1."Bombhaat"Kasarla ShyamRahul Sipligunj, Ramya Behara4:02
2."Miss Sunshine"Krishna kanthAnurag Kulkarni, Sinduri3:56
3."Laggam Time"Krishna kanthSaicharan, Sahiti Chaganti4:52
4."Freedom"Krishna kanthAnurag Kulkarni, Ramya Behara3:48
Total length:16:38

Reception

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Critical response

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Priyanka Sundar from The Indian Express wrote "Such technical brilliance, especially the beautiful shots in Las Vegas is lost in the confusion that has taken shape on screen".[3] A reviewer of Samayam says "Mani Sharma's background score is a plus for the movie. All in all, Hanu Raghavapudi has impressed with his take as a director. Audiences who like stylish action intellectual thriller mind game movies will definitely like 'Lie'."[4] Srivathsan Nadadhur from The Hindu wrote "A simple story with a complex narrative, Lie is a director’s show. Hanu Raghavapudi proves he’s here to stay for long."[5]

References

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  1. ^ "LIE review: A thriller that lacks pace". Sify. Archived from the original on 11 August 2017.
  2. ^ "LIE Movie Review {3/5}: The nail-biting experience that the second-half offers goes south towards the end". The Times of India.
  3. ^ "LIE movie review: What were the filmmakers smoking?". The Indian Express. 12 August 2017. Archived from the original on 26 November 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  4. ^ "Lie Movie Review". Samayam (in Telugu). 20 November 2017. Archived from the original on 14 October 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  5. ^ "Lie: Well conceived deceit". The Hindu. 11 August 2017. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
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