Ad
related to: devara movie tickets booking sri lanka
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Devara: Part 1 received mixed reviews from critics and audiences alike. [135] On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 33% of 18 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.7/10. [136] Mahpara Kabir of ABP Live gave 3.5/5 stars and wrote "Devara: Part 1 is a gripping action drama that offers an entertaining cinematic ...
Savoy Cinema, Colombo also known as Savoy 3D Cinema and Savoy 2 is a prominent cinema in Sri Lanka located on Galle Road in Wellawatte, Colombo, just near the old Dutch canal. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The building is owned and run by EAP Films and Theatres Private Limited.
Marketed from the outset as “Devara: Part 1,” the latest Telugu action offering featuring “RRR” co-lead N. T. Rama Rao Jr. (or Junior NTR) is both incomplete and overlong. It relies ...
The company was founded by a husband-and-wife team in 1972 as Edirisinghe Cinema Theatres under its parent company, EAP Group. EAP acquired Savoy Cinema theatres in 1974. . At first only Sinhala films were distributed, but during the mid-1980s a license for distribution of Hollywood movies was add
Released on January 20. It is the first 3D animation movie using motion capture technology in Sri Lanka. [42] Vedi Nowadina Lamai: Indika Ferdinando Kalana Gunasekara, Anusaya Subasinghe, Jayalath Manoratne, Hemasiri Liyanage, Dayadeva Edirisinghe, Mahendra Perera: Children's drama Released on February 16. [43] Thattu Deke Iskole: Lalith ...
Sri Lanka Sinhala Cinema Database - www.films.lk; New Sinhala Films - www.sirisara.lk; New Sinhala Movies; National Film Corporation of Sri Lanka - Official Website; Sri Lankan film at the Internet Movie Database; Sandeshaya Sri Lankan Film Information and Sinhala Film Details; Watch Sinhala teledramas
Another interview with Dewaprija, published in the Sri Lanka Sunday Times on 5 September 2004, points out that Exchange, a short experimental film whose context is "colonial Sri Lanka under the British rule," which he presented under the auspices of the University of Colombo, was "The first Sri Lankan entry" in the Tokyo Short Shorts Film ...
Aba, also became the most expensive film produced in Sri Lanka costing over 60 million Rupees to produce as well as being the first Sri Lankan film to be finished via Digital Intermediate technology. Several other countries such as China , Italy and Australia have shown interest in screening this film after its trailer was released.