Ek Mini Katha

A "Mini" Story[a]) is a 2021 Indian Telugu-language adult comedy film directed by debutant Karthik Rapolu and written by Merlapaka Gandhi.

[4] Ram Mohan, a university professor, visits psychiatrist Dr. Satya Kishore and explains his son Santosh's sex addiction and need for counseling.

Santosh is also part of a social media group called SDG and follows different methods, medicines, and devices suggested by members for penis enlargement, but all efforts go in vain.

Finally, he opens up about his problem with his colleague, for which Sudarshan suggests going for penis enlargement surgery and arranges an appointment with a urologist.

On the day of the meeting at Amrutha's house, Santosh learns that the girl has a code of expressing her rejection by spilling coffee on the man.

Later he decides to get the risky penis enlargement surgery for Amrutha, for which he loans around 15lakh rupees from a local goon.

On the final day of the course, the medicine gets mixed in lunch preparations thus consumed by all cousins they fight among each other as a side effect.

The psychiatrist listens to Santosh's issue and then he explains that his fears and stigmas are rather mental-oriented and it doesn't have to do anything with his penis size.

The psychiatrist later meets Ram Mohan and blames him that he failed to understand his son's mental issue and address it.

As a result, Santosh alone had to fight his stigma of a small penis for the past twenty years and not killing himself as a saving grace.

Finally, Santosh goes to Amrutha's place, takes a loudspeaker, and expresses his love for her, his fear of having a small penis, but he doesn't care about society anymore.

Realizing his own experience as a child when he asked a similar question to his father, Santosh decides not to have such a situation with his son.

All music is composed by Praveen LakkarajuThe film was earlier scheduled for theatrical release on 30 April 2021.

Sangeetha Devi Dundoo of The Hindu gave a mixed response for the film with exception of lead actor's acting.

[14] The Indian Express critic Manoj Kumar R called it a half-baked comedy on matters of size.

"[16] Ramya Palisetty of India Today wrote that Ek Mini Katha begins by offering us something new but fails to deliver in the end.