Yagna (film)

Yagna (Kannada: ಯಜ್ನ) is a 2009 Indian Kannada-language film directed by Krishna Brahma, starring Sriimurali and Priyanka in the lead roles.

Yagna (ಯಜ್ನ)
Directed byKrishna Brahma
Produced byR Shankar
Starring
CinematographyA R Niranjan Babu
Edited byGovardhan
Music byMurali
Release date
  • 17 April 2009 (2009-04-17)
CountryIndia
LanguageKannada

Cast

Music

Yagna
Soundtrack album by
Murali Krishna
Released2009
Recorded2009
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length20:22
LanguageKannada
Official audio
Yagna- Full Album on YouTube
Track listing
No.TitleSinger(s)Length
1."Mana Midiyuva"Kunal Ganjawala, Sunitha Iyer4:40
2."Dhum Idre Baaro"Hemant Kumar, Sunitha Iyer3:36
3."Ee Nayana"Chaitra H. G.4:05
4."Kogileye"Karthik, Priyadarshini4:01
5."Kanda Kshana"M N Krupakar, Priyadarshini4:00
Total length:20:22

Reception

Critical response

A critic from The New Indian Express wrote "The suspense begins when Yagna’s friends start getting killed one by one. Anji kills Raj , a dejected lover, who used to frighten the bungalow’s inmates In the climax, the director reveals that Anji is a police inspector who was assigned to investigate the mysterious deaths and Yagna is the owner of that bungalow. If you manage to sit through this film, it will be a miracle".[1] A critic from Rediff.com  scored the film at 1 out of 5 stars and says "Sree Murali once again proves that he is a good actor who unfortunately chooses the wrong films. He is good in the climax as well as in the fight sequences. Debutant Priyanka indulges in lot of skin show in the dance sequences. Om Prakash Rao's comedy gets to your nerves. Camera work of Niranjan Babu is passable while Sree Murali's music is very ordinary. All in all, a horror film you won't miss seeing".[2] A critic from The Times of India  scored the film at 2 out of 5 stars and wrote "While Srimurali has given his best, Priyanka is impressive. Omprakash Rao shines. Camerawork by Niranjan is poor. The less said the better about music by Murali".[3] A critic from Bangalore Mirror wrote "Deaths ensue and Aaji has the task of finding out the cause. Like in most such films, the climax reveals that various characters are not what actually they were made out to be. Disconnect between scenes, virtual absence of characterisation and bad narration makes Yagna a torture to watch".[4]

References

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