Kiran Abbavaram is known for his penchant to do different roles and different genre entertainers. He is coming to entertain movie lovers with his upcoming film titled K-Ramp. K-Ramp OTT rights have been bagged by Aha Prime Video. The film directed by Jains Nani is releasing on 18 October 2025. Let us see what impact Kiran Abbavaram created with K-Ramp at the box office.
K-Ramp story revolves around a rich guy who is spoilt brat who believes in boozing and enjoying. Kumar (Kiran Abbavaram) is forced to join Engineering College in Kerala where he comes across a beautiful girl Mercy Joy (Yukti Thareja).
Why he is forced to go to Kerala, what changes it brings in his life, what role his father Krishna (Sai Kumar), Uncle (Naresh), Mercy's father Albert (Ajay), uncle Daniel (Muralidhar Goud) play form the rest of the narration.
Kiran Abbavaram is as usual in his self. He performed well according to his role. He with his body language and mannerisms made an impression. With every project he is showing continuous improvement in his expressions and emotions and this should be appreciated. He is fine with his looks but could have done more to make even more better impression.
Yukti Thareja looked beautiful on screen and did what is required from her. She didn't get much scope to show her acting talent.
Sai Kumar is good in the role of the protagonist's father. He performed well and made an impression. Sr Naresh got a brief role but it looked out of sync for his age. His character should have been written in a better manner.
Muralidhar Goud came up with good performance. Vennela Kishore's role failed to make any impression. Othersv like Ali, Sreenivas Reddy, Sivannarayana performed according to their roles.
K-Ramp story is penned by Jains Nani. He came up with predictable story and tried to entertain masses and youngsters with youthful and mass elements. Right from the start till the end is loaded with monotonous and routine elements.
He tried to generate humour with few scenes involving hero and father and hero and the heroine. While some work, others ends up testing the patience of the viewers. There are many forces scenes and even the Kerala backdrop is meant only for the heck of it with all speaking conveniently in Telugu.
The first half is ok to some extent and all boils down to the second half. The director included even cuss words and double meaning dialogues to attract viewers but didn't work at all. While the first half turns out to be below average, second half turns out to be tedious and patient tester though main story was unravelled in the second half.
Jains Nani in the name of story and generating humour, filmed the scenes in a loud manner making viewers look towards the exit doors.
The songs tuned by Chaitan Bharadwaj fail to register. None of the songs are appealing. He with his background score elevated the scenes but they are far and inbetween and most of the times it turned out to be loud and jarring.
Sateesh Reddy Maasam with his Cinematography beautified the film capturing the scenic and natural locations of Kerala in a visually beautiful manner on the big screen.
Chota K Prasad's editing could have been far better respectively in the second half where there are many scenes that slowed the pace of the narration. Production values are good.
Altogether, K-Ramp turns out to be a outdated entertainer. Though Kiran Abbavaram tried his best to bring in variations in his performance and put in lot of effort, Jains Nani came up with the outdated story and then the weak writing, screenplay and direction and this impacted the film's final output. No amount of rework of the story and script would have changed the film's final result. All in all the film turns out to be a cringe fest. Considering all these elements, Cinejosh goes with a 2 rating for K-Ramp.