Rashmika Mandanna trolled for language trouble!

Actress Rashmika Mandanna had debuted in Kannada industry and went on to star in Telugu movies, and her films like Geetha Govindam had turned out to be huge hits and made her popular across south India. Now the actress is playing Karthi’s pair in her Tamil debut movie directed by Remo director Bakkiyaraj Kannan.

Even as there are rumours that she might play one of the female leads in Vijay’s next movie directed by Lokesh Kanagaraj, Rashmika has got into trouble for an unexpected reason. Dear Comrade starring Rashmika Mandanna and Vijay Deverakonda got released yesterday and has opened well.

During the promotions of the movie, when she was questioned on which language she feels tough to dub and act and Rashmika responded that it was tough to dub in Kannada, and following this, Kannada associations started trolling and tweeting against Rashmika as she is from Karnataka, and have started trending Boycott Dear comrade on Twitter.

indiaglitzcom

Racing is my passion; fans are my strength – Ajith Kumar’s heartfelt revelation!

Ajith Kumar, the superstar of Tamil cinema and the speed king of the tracks, has…

26 minutes

Dhurandhar 2 Builds Momentum With Aggressive Telugu Market Strategy

Set for a theatrical release on March 19, Dhurandhar 2 is steadily emerging as one…

5 hours

Parasakthi Streams Online: Sivakarthikeyan’s Period Drama Eyes OTT Audience

Released during Pongal, Parasakthi marked Sivakarthikeyan’s foray into a gritty period political action space under…

5 hours

Gaayapadda Simham Announced: Tharun Bhascker Headlines a Witty Political Satire

Actor Tharun Bhascker continues to strengthen his reputation for unconventional cinema, and his next project,…

17 hours

Arya Launches Atharvaa’s ‘Valai’ Teaser!

ctor Arya has presented the official teaser for the upcoming Tamil film #Valai, starring Atharvaa…

19 hours

Toxic Creates History Before Release: Dil Raju’s SVC Bags AP–TG Rights for Record Price

Toxic: A Fairytale for Grown-Ups has stormed into the record books even before its theatrical…

22 hours