
The movie Happy Raj feels like something we’ve seen before, just wrapped in a fresh, colorful package. G. V. Prakash Kumar does his usual charm well — he’s natural, expressive, and carries the film decently. But the story? That’s where it kind of plays safe.
It starts off fun, light, and gives that “feel-good youthful vibe,” especially with the visuals and music (no surprise there, music is actually one of the strong points). But as it goes on, the screenplay becomes predictable. You can almost guess what’s coming next, scene by scene.
The emotional parts try to hit hard, but they don’t fully land. Not because they’re bad — just because they feel a bit rushed and not deeply built. Some scenes had potential to be really memorable, but they pass too quickly.
Comedy works in bits. Not cringe, not amazing — just okay. Background score is solid, though — that’s where the film really holds its energy.
👉 Honest verdict:
Good for a one-time watch 👍
Works if you go in with zero expectations
Won’t stay in your mind for long
#HappyRaj @gvprakash

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