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K-Ramp

2025 Indian comedy drama film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

K-Ramp
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K-Ramp is a 2025 Indian Telugu-language comedy drama film written and directed by Jains Nani, starring Kiran Abbavaram[4] and Yukti Thareja in the lead roles. The film was released theatrically on 18 October 2025, coinciding with Diwali week.[5]

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Plot

Kumar Abbavaram (Kiran Abbavaram) is a spoiled rich kid who lives for leisure, nightlife, and ego-driven charm. When Mercy (Yukti Thareja), a kind yet traumatized woman battling PTSD, enters his life, he mistakes her empathy for affection. After his father sends him to Kerala to mature, Kumar slowly confronts the reality of Mercy’s mental health struggles. His misguided attempts to “save” her turn into a lesson in empathy and responsibility. K-Ramp follows a self-absorbed man’s uneasy transformation from entitlement to understanding.[6]

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Cast

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Production

The film was launched with a puja ceremony in early 2025 under the banners Hasya Movies and Rudransh Celluloids, with producers Razesh Danda and Shiva Bommak.[7] Principal shooting began in May 2025[8]

The first look poster was unveiled on 30 June 2025, depicting Abbavaram in a lungi with stylized backdrops (bottles in heart shape) and vibrant visuals that hint at a mass entertainer.[9]

A promotional glimpse titled “The Richest Chiller Guy” was released on 14 July 2025, partially shot at Kochi Port, with the lead shown in a relaxed, swaggy avatar.[10]

Marketing and Release

A teaser was released on YouTube featuring cast and technical crew details. The promotional “Richest Chiller Guy” glimpse,[11] stylized posters, and release date announcements have formed key parts of the marketing campaign and received criticism from some quarters for containing suggestive or risqué dialogue.

Kiran Abbavaram has publicly expressed that K-Ramp is encountering screen allocation challenges in Tamil Nadu, highlighting a perceived disparity in distribution for Telugu films in that region.[12] The director explained that the ‘K’ stands for Kumar, the protagonist, and ‘ramp’ represents his journey.

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Reception

Paul Nicodemus of The Times of India rated the film 3/5 stars and wrote, "K-Ramp works as a watchable romantic entertainer with lively performances and humorous moments. A more cohesive first half and sharper writing could have elevated it further."[13] Avad Mohammad of OTTPlay gave the film 2/5 stars and wrote, "K-Ramp is an out-and-out masala film that is over the top and lacks emotional depth. There is passable comedy in the second half, but the weak story and exaggerated performances make this film one with very limited appeal."[14]

T. Maruthi Acharya of India Today gave it 1/5 stars and wrote, "Its humour fails, its emotions ring hollow, and its treatment of mental health and regional identity borders on offensive. [...] the film never knows when to stop joking or what counts as a joke."[15] Srivathsan Nadadhur of The Hindu wrote, "Director Jains Nani’s patience-testing Telugu comedy drama makes a mockery of mental health issues [...] The only intermittent relief comes from a comedy track involving Vennela Kishore, who verbalises a viewer’s frustration with the film with his angsty, caustic responses."[16]

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References

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