Vijay filmography
Vijay is an Indian actor, playback singer and politician who works in Tamil cinema. He made his cinematic debut in 1984 with Vetri, directed by his father, S. A. Chandrasekhar.[1] After appearing in Chandrasekhar's films as a child artist, Vijay made his debut as a lead actor with Naalaiya Theerpu (1992) at the age of 18.[1] He followed it with a role opposite Vijayakanth in Senthoorapandi (1993).[2] Vijay went on to play lead roles in his father's directorial ventures such as Rasigan(1994) and Deva (1995)Vishnu[2][3] Most of those films were successful commercially.[4][5]
Vijay's first commercial blockbuster was romcom Coimbatore Mappillai in 1996,[6] followed by his breakthrough blockbuster romance film, Poove Unakkaga.[2][4] His subsequent films, Love Today (1997) and Kadhalukku Mariyadhai (1997), were critically and commercially successful.[4][7] His performance in the latter won him the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Actor.[4] Thulladha Manamum Thullum (1999), where he played a passionate singer gained him the reputation of a romantic hero.[8][9]
Vijay began the new millennium with critically and commercially successful films such as Kushi and Priyamaanavale.[10][11] The following year, he appeared in three films: Friends, Badri and Shahjahan. All three were box office successes;[12][13] barring successful ventures Thamizhan,[13] Youth and Bagavathi (all three released in 2002),[14][15] his subsequent films Vaseegara and Pudhiya Geethai were released. While Vaseegara was a moderate success and received praise for his comic-timing,[16] Puthiya Geethai received negative reviews and underperformed at the box office.[17][18][19] The success of his masala film Thirumalai (2003),[20] changed his on-screen persona to that of an action hero.[21] He appeared next as a kabaddi player in Ghilli (2004), which went on to become the most commercially successful Tamil film of the year.[4][22] His performance as a sword-smith in the masala film Thirupaachi (2005) earned him a special prize at the Tamil Nadu State Film Awards.[23][24] He continued to achieve commercial success with Sivakasi (2005) and Pokkiri (2007).[25][26] Barring Vettaikaaran and Kuruvi's box office successes,[27] his subsequent releases Azhagiya Tamil Magan (2007), where he played dual roles for the first time in his career,[28] and Villu (2009) were average successes;[29][30][31] his 50th film, Sura (2010), managed to recover only its production cost.[32]
In 2011 Vijay's career prospects improved after he was praised for his role as a bodyguard in Kaavalan, which had a 100-day theatrical run and was a box office hit.[33][34] Velayudham in which, he appeared as a masked superhero was commercially successful worldwide.[35] The following year he appeared in two films: as a college student in Nanban and an army officer in Thuppakki.[36][37] His performances in both films received positive critical feedback.[38] He followed that with Thalaivaa (2013) and the multi-starrer Jilla (2014) which was commercially successful.[39][40] He teamed up with Murugadoss again for the action film Kaththi (2014). The film, which had Vijay playing dual roles as a thief and an idealist, became one of the highest-grossing Tamil films of that year; his performances earned him critics praise.[41][42] In his next film, fantasy Puli (2015), he featured again in dual roles;[43] it was an overseas success.[44] The following year, he played a police officer in Atlee's Theri to mixed reviews.[45] The film had one of the biggest openings in Tamil cinema and was a major commercial success.[46][47][48] Vijay's performance won him South Indian International Movie Awards.[49][50] He played triple roles for the first time in Mersal (2017).[51] In addition to garnering a UK Award for Best Actor,[52][53] the film became a box office success.[54] Vijay earned critical acclaim for Sarkar (2018).[55][56] He also starred in films Bigil (2019), Master (2021), Beast (2022), Varisu, Leo (both 2023) and He played a four roles in The Greatest of All Time (2024), all of which garnered mixed reviews but were commercially successful in the box office, with Leo becoming the highest-grossing film of his career.[57][58]
Film
[edit]† | Denotes films that have not yet been released |
- All films are in Tamil, unless otherwise noted.
Year | Title | Role(s) | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Vetri | Vijay | Child artist | [1] [59] |
Kudumbam | Narada | [1] [59] | ||
1985 | Naan Sigappu Manithan | Vijay | [1] [59] | |
1986 | Vasantha Raagam | Vijay | [1] [59] | |
1987 | Sattam Oru Vilaiyattu | Raja | [1] [59] | |
1988 | Ithu Engal Neethi | Vijay | [60] | |
1992 | Naalaiya Theerpu | Vijay | Debut as a lead | [61] |
1993 | Senthoorapandi | Vijay | [3] [62] | |
1994 | Rasigan | Vijay | [63] | |
1995 | Deva | Deva | [3] [64] | |
Rajavin Parvaiyile | Raja | [1] | ||
Vishnu | Vishnu (Krishna)[a] | [65] | ||
Chandralekha | Rahim Rowther | [66] | ||
1996 | Coimbatore Mappillai | Balu | [67] | |
Poove Unakkaga | Raja | [68] | ||
Vasantha Vaasal | Vijay | [69] | ||
Maanbumigu Maanavan | Sivaraj | [70] | ||
Selva | Selvan | [64] | ||
1997 | Kaalamellam Kaathiruppen | Kannan | [64] | |
Love Today | Ganesh | [71] | ||
Once More | Vijay | [72] | ||
Nerrukku Ner | Vijay | [69] | ||
Kadhalukku Mariyadhai | Jeevanandham (Jeeva) | [73] | ||
1998 | Ninaithen Vandhai | Gokulakrishnan | [74] | |
Priyamudan | Vasanth | [75] | ||
Nilaave Vaa | Siluvai | [76] | ||
1999 | Thulladha Manamum Thullum | Kutty | [77] | |
Endrendrum Kadhal | Vijay | [69] | ||
Nenjinile | Karunakaran (Karna) | [78] | ||
Minsara Kanna | Kannan (Kasi)[a] | [79] [80] | ||
2000 | Kannukkul Nilavu | Gautham Prabhakar | 25th film | [81] |
Kushi | Shiva | [82] | ||
Priyamaanavale | Vijay Vishwanathan | [83] | ||
2001 | Friends | Aravindhan | [84] | |
Badri | Sri Badrinatha Moorthy (Badri) | [85] | ||
Shahjahan | Ashok Ilango | [86] [87] | ||
2002 | Thamizhan | Surya | [88] | |
Youth | Shiva | [89] | ||
Bagavathi | Bhagavathi | [90] | ||
2003 | Vaseegara | Boopathi | [91] | |
Pudhiya Geethai | Sarathy | [92] | ||
Thirumalai | Thirumalai | [93] | ||
2004 | Udhaya | Udhayakumaran (Udhaya) | [94] | |
Ghilli | Saravanavelu (Velu, Ghilli)[a] | [95] | ||
Madhurey | Maduravel (Madhurey) | [96] | ||
2005 | Thirupaachi | Sivagiri (Giri) | [23] | |
Sukran | Sukran | Extended cameo | [97] [98] | |
Sachein | Sachein | [99] | ||
Sivakasi | Muthappa (Sivakasi)[a] | [100] | ||
2006 | Aathi | Aathikesavan | [101] | |
2007 | Pokkiri | Sathyamoorthy (Thamizh)[a] | [102] [103] | |
Azhagiya Tamil Magan | Guru, Prasad[b] | [104] | ||
2008 | Kuruvi | Vetrivel (Velu, Kuruvi) | [105] | |
Pandhayam | Himself | Guest appearance | [106] | |
2009 | Villu | Pugazh, Saravanan[b] | [107] | |
Vettaikaaran | "Police" Ravi | [108] | ||
2010 | Sura | Sura | 50th film | [109] |
2011 | Kaavalan | Bhoominathan (Bhoomi) | [110] | |
Velayudham | Velu (Velayudham) | [111] | ||
2012 | Nanban | Kosaksi Pasapugazh (Panchavan Parivendan)[a] | [112] [113] | |
Rowdy Rathore | Himself | Hindi film; Guest appearance in the song "Chinta Ta" | [114] | |
Thuppakki | Jagadish Dhanapal | [115] | ||
2013 | Thalaivaa | Vishwa Ramadorai (Vishwa Bhai) | [116] | |
2014 | Jilla | Shakthi Aarumugam (Jilla) | [117] [118] | |
Kaththi | Kathiresan (Kaththi), Jeevanandham[b] | [41] [119] | ||
2015 | Puli | Marudheeran, Pulivendhan[b] | [120] [121] | |
2016 | Theri | Vijay Kumar (Joseph Kuruvilla, Dharmeshwar)[a] | [122] | |
2017 | Bairavaa | Bairavaa | [123] | |
Mersal | Vetri, Maaran, Vetrimaaran[c] | [51] [124] | ||
2018 | Sarkar | Sundar Ramaswamy | [125] | |
2019 | Bigil | Michael Rayappan (Bigil), Rayappan[b] | [126] | |
2021 | Master | JD (John Durairaj) | [127] | |
2022 | Beast | Veera Raghavan | [128] | |
2023 | Varisu | Vijay Rajendran | [129] | |
Leo | Parthiban (Leo Das)[a] | [130] | ||
2024 | The Greatest of All Time | Gandhi, Jeevan (Sanjay), Jeevan’s Clone 1 and Jeevan’s Clone 2 [d] | [131] | |
2025 | Thalapathy 69 † | TBA | Filming | [132] |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
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- ^ a b c "Vijay & Dharani". Sify. 14 May 2004. Archived from the original on 13 January 2017. Retrieved 13 January 2017.
- ^ a b c "70 வயது 70 சினிமாக்கள் எஸ்.ஏ.சந்திரசேகரன் அன்றும்-இன்றும்". Dina Thanthi (in Tamil). 14 February 2016. Archived from the original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved 12 January 2017.
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The film has also done well overseas with $10.75 million (Rs. 88 crores) to date, for a worldwide gross of Rs. 292 crores.
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{{cite web}}
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