Director: A. Kodandarami Reddy
Cast: Chiranjeevi, Vijayashanti
This film defined the "urban angst" of the 80s. The blue-tinted night shoots, the whistles, and the Vijayashanti-Chiranjeevi chemistry are vintage gold. It is less sad and more "cool blue"—the color of denim, night clubs, and youthful rebellion. telugu roja blue film exclusive
Director: Mani Ratnam Cast: Nagarjuna, Girija Shettar Director: A
Shot entirely in the rainy Ooty forests. The entire film is tinted blue-green (cyan). The story of terminally ill lovers, the song "Om Namaha" (A. R. Rahman’s first? No, but Ilaiyaraaja’s peak). The visual of Girija spinning in a white dress against a blue mountain mist is the poster image of this genre. It is less sad and more "cool blue"—the
Light blue – comedy of errors with heart.
Don’t mistake it for pure comedy. The scenes between Sathyam and Saroja, especially the night conversations under dim lantern light, carry that classic longing. N. T. Rama Rao’s restrained performance as a humble caretaker in love is vintage gold.
The OG of doomed love.
Akkineni Nageswara Rao’s Devadasu and Savitri’s Parvati. The scene where Devadasu returns as a vagabond, and Parvati sees him through a rain-streaked window—that’s Roja Blue frozen in time. Every frame drips with quiet devastation.