Aadanthe Ado Type is a 2003 Indian Telugu-language romance film directed by E V V Satyanarayana, starring Aryan Rajesh, Sivaji and Anita Hassanandani. It is a remake of the 2002 Tamil film Mounam Pesiyadhe by Ameer Sultan, with Aryan Rajesh, Anita, Shivaji, and Sindhu replacing Suriya, Trisha, Nandha, and Neha Pendse, respectively, who originally played the roles. The film was released on 30 August 2003. A dubbed Telugu version of Mounam Pesiyadhe, titled Kanchu, which was released in 2006.
Surya (Aryan Rajesh) is a man who hates love. But somehow he is charmed by Brunda (Anita Hassanandani). Brunda likes his attitude and admires him as a friend. But her admiration coupled with a few coincidences makes Surya think that she is in love him. When he is expecting her to speak those magical words (I love you), she introduces Surya to her fiancé (Sai Kiran). After Brunda marries her beau, a damsel (Bhoomika Chawla) meets Surya and explains the flashback. That beautiful girl is a silent admirer of Surya and had been following him for years. She proposes to Surya when they were in college. Surya asks her to come back once he is financially settled, as love and life after all need security. Finally Surya settles down with her and the movie ends on a happy note.
The music, including film score, was composed by Ilaiyaraaja's youngest son, Yuvan Shankar Raja. The soundtrack comprises 7 tracks, composed by Yuvan Shankar Raja as well, out of which 4 songs were retained from the original film and 1 song was retained from Manadhai Thirudivittai with minor modifications. The lyrics were written by Surendra Krishna. The audio was launched live through Gemini TV, whereas viewers themselves could release one of the songs, by calling on a certain number. Out of 2.7 lakhs callers 7 people got the chance to release a song each.
Jeevi of Idlebrain.com rated the film 2.5/5 and wrote, "Though the narration sounded neat, the emotions of the film were not brought out. EVV should stop handling subjects which he is not familiar with and start adapting the his[sic] good old narration style, which has given his blockbusters in the past".