

And the director does come out unscathed. Subhash because presenting physical impairment without hurting sentiments is not easy.

Music by Deva is very average." The Hindu noted "it is a tightrope walk for director K. The three brothers have tried to outbeat each other when it comes to dancing. However, the highlight of the film are the dances and the choreography. The Tamil version of the film opened on 1 June 2002 to mixed reviews with a critic noting "Dilshad as the blind Tirupathy has done his role well but Raju Sundaram and Nagendra Prasad have to pick up the nuances of acting. The film was released in Kannada under the supervision of Sundeep Malani, with another regional actor Komal Kumar chosen to replace Karunas as the thief. The mouth freshener brand, Pass Pass, teamed up with the film to put product placement into the venture. The dialogues were written by Thotapalli Madhu and lyrics were written by Ponduri, Bhavanachandra and Rohini Krishna as the film was dubbed and released with a few reshot scenes. In Telugu, the film was adapted under Siddesh Films with Uttej signed on to reshoot scenes which had featured Karunas in the Tamil version. Sandeep Chowta was initially expected to be music director, but was later replaced by Deva. Karunas was selected to play a key role, while Sundaram was reported to be a choreographer in the film, which would be based on a Marathi play title All the Best. In December 2001, the three sons of prominent dance choreographer Mugur Sundar were reported to be coming together to star in the Tamil film, and while Prabhu Deva was an established actor and Raju Sundaram had also appeared in films, it became the first substantial role for Nagendra Prasad.
