

The happy-go-lucky movie slowly turns into an emotional rollercoaster and the same adorable innocence in the first half will make hearts weep at the scenes in pre-climax.

He proves his brilliance by showing harsh realities as they are instead of sugar-coating them.

Sandeep Raj again hits the right notes by narrating the story in a thought-provoking way. The second half of this film begins by pretending to be a happy story but it is stuffed with high emotions. The first half of the movie feels like a fresh countryside breeze. Bala Yesu's character is so pure that even when he swears at people, it looks adorable. Kannayya has a partner in crime called Bala Yesu (Harsha Chemudu), who truly steals the show. The innocence in his character is well maintained and the humour is top-notch. He falls in love with Deepti who is his classmate and fails to express it to her. Kannayya is a hard-working student who dreams big in life. What is funnier is that a few characters in the film imagine that things will change by the year 2020. The movie is set in late the 90s where people casually discriminate on the basis of skin colour and believe that fair-skinned women are too much to ask for dark-skinned men. Dialogues are important to any love story but the way director Sandeep Raj uses them during key scenes makes this film a memorable one. The story is a simple one, but what blows the mind is its writing. Review: Ever since the teaser and songs of Colour Photo released, the film has always felt promising. The racist brother tries hard to separate the love birds but what does his attempt lead to? Will Kannayya’s love win over the colour of his skin? Deepti’s brother Rama Raju (Sunil) is a brutal cop who believes that the colour of the skin matters a lot, at least for anyone who wants to marry his sister.

Story: Kannayya (Suhas) and Deepti (Chandini Chowdary) are two engineering students from a small town in Andhra Pradesh who fall for each other.
