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At its core, Lovers is a two-character chamber piece. We meet a young couple, simply known as the Boy (Sri Simha Koduri) and the Girl (Riddhi Kumar), who are navigating the precarious transition from passionate courtship to the grinding reality of a long-term relationship. The film’s narrative is not linear but cyclical, trapped within the claustrophobic confines of their apartment, the lonely streets of Hyderabad at night, and the echo chambers of their own memories. The plot is deceptively simple: a series of escalating arguments, bitter accusations, fleeting reconciliations, and the slow, agonizing realization that the person beside you has become a stranger. There is no external villain—no disapproving parent, no societal taboo, no rival lover. The antagonist is time, familiarity, and the quiet erosion of patience.

Lovers (2014) is a Telugu romantic comedy directed by Harinath with a screenplay by Maruthi Dasari, focusing on a man whose relationship pursuits are sabotaged by a woman who later becomes his love interest. The film, which was considered a box office success, features Sumanth Ashwin and Nanditha Raj, with comedic elements driven by Sapthagiri. For more, visit Wikipedia .

The music by J.B. was a significant plus for the film.

Crucially, Siddhu has never actually met Chitra face-to-face; she is a "faceless" rival who influences his potential girlfriends—Geetha and Soumya—to dump him based on her "scientific" theories about men being "flirts". The irony peaks when Siddhu eventually falls head-over-heels for a woman he meets later, only to realize she is the very same Chitra who ruined his past romantic life.

While the first half is fast-paced and filled with laughs, the second half slows down slightly, focusing more on the emotional conflict and resolution. Critics at the time noted that the story was formulaic, but the execution made it enjoyable.

The film revolves around , a college student who has a history of failed love affairs. He decides to stay away from love and relationships after a bitter breakup. However, as fate would have it, he meets Geetha (Nanditha) .

Comparisons to Richard Linklater’s Before Midnight or Noah Baumbach’s Marriage Story are inevitable, but Lovers is distinctly Telugu. It captures the specific anxieties of the urban, millennial middle class in Hyderabad—the pressure to settle down, the clash between traditional upbringing and modern desires, the casual sexism woven into everyday language. The film’s dialogues, written by Bala, are painfully authentic. They are not quotable one-liners but the messy, hurtful, circular arguments that anyone who has loved and lost will recognize. Lines are repeated, points are rehashed, and silence is weaponized. It is a film that understands that love dies not in a single dramatic moment, but in a thousand small cuts.

Initially, Siddhu tries to avoid her, but he eventually falls in love with her honesty and innocence. Just as he decides to propose, a misunderstanding occurs. Geetha rejects his proposal, believing he is a "playboy" who flirts with every girl. The rest of the story follows Siddhu’s efforts to prove his true love and clear the misunderstanding, while navigating typical family drama and comedic situations provided by the supporting cast.