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When director Kiranraj isn't showing you pictureseque locales (cinematography by Arvind S Kashyap) during Dharma's life-changing road trip, he's making you invested in the story thanks also to its music (by Nobin Paul), with wonderful little songs peppered in the screenplay, like the occasional barks that Charlie lets out. This is predominantly a man-animal relationship film, but it is also a travel film and a musical. And then, life, for Dharma, becomes topsy turvy. Until a Labrador pup, which he later names Charlie due to his love for Charlie Chaplin, comes into his life. Simply put, he's a loner without any friends, family or bonds. At the factory he works in, he is one of the best workers - he doesn't take a single day of leave - and prefers to keep to himself, thus earning the ire of most of his colleagues. His house is always in a mess, with cigarette butts and liquor bottles strewn around. You can't find fault with the others after all, he rarely bothers about the colony he lives in or his neighbours and is mostly grumpy and unkempt. "How others view me isn't right," he says, in a voiceover early in the film. And their latest work is a deeply heartfelt cinematic presentation of that fact.ĭharma (Rakshit Shetty) is a loner who feels that what he does is always correct. The makers of recent film 777 Charlie certainly think so.
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