When a young man finally gets the chance to take over his fathers business, he walks into an unexpected world instead of a boardroom, and ends up juggling love, lies, and a legacy no one saw coming
HEY BALWANTH REVIEW
If you have a soft corner for middle-of-the-road cinema - the kind of gentle, rooted storytelling we saw in the 70s and 80s in Bollywood with Amol Palekar - you will likely appreciate Suhas. He represents the archetypal Telugu everyman, without the weight of a star surname or larger-than-life baggage. In many ways, he feels like a detox after the usual bling-heavy Telugu spectacles. By bling, I mean films that often sacrifice story at the altar of stardom - projects designed primarily to elevate a hero rather than narrate a compelling tale. Against that backdrop, Suhas stands out as a quiet ba....