Vijay filmography
Vijay is an Indian actor 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 an 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 supporting role opposite Vijayakanth in Sendhoorapandi (1993).[2] Vijay went on to play lead roles in his father's directorial ventures such as Rasigan (1994) and Deva (1995).[2][3] Most of those films were successful commercially.[4][5]
Vijay's first breakthrough was in 1996 with Vikraman's romance film, Poove Unakkaga.[2][4] His subsequent films, Vasanth's Nerrukku Ner (1997) and Fazil's Kadhalukku Mariyadhai (1997), were critically and commercially successful.[4][6] 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.[7][8]
Vijay began the new millennium with critically and commercially successful films such as Kushi and Priyamaanavale.[9][10] The following year, he appeared in three films: Friends, Badri and Shahjahan. All three were box office successes;[11][12] barring successful ventures Thamizhan,[12] Youth and Bagavathi (all three released in 2002),[13][14] his subsequent films Vaseegara and Pudhiya Geethai were released. While Vaseegara was a moderate success and received praise for his comic-timing,[15] Puthiya Geethai received negative reviews and underperformed at the box office.[16][17][18] The success of his masala film Thirumalai (2003),[19] changed his on-screen persona to that of an action hero.[20] 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][21] His performance as a sword-smith in the masala film Thirupaachi (2005) earned him a special prize at the Tamil Nadu State Film Awards.[22][23] He continued to achieve commercial success with Sivakasi (2005) and Pokkiri (2007).[24][25] The latter garnered him a Filmfare Award nomination for Best Actor.[26] Barring Vettaikaaran's box office success,[27] all of his subsequent releases from Azhagiya Tamil Magan (2007), where he played dual roles for the first time in his career,[28] to 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.[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] with the latter earning him a Best Actor nomination at the 60th Filmfare Awards South.[39] He followed that with A. L. Vijay's Thalaivaa (2013) and the multi-starrer Jilla (2014) which was commercially successful.[40][41] 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.[42][43] In his next film, Chimbu Deven's fantasy Puli (2015), he featured again in dual roles;[44] it was an overseas success.[45] The following year, he played a police officer in Atlee's Theri.[46] The film had one of the biggest openings in Tamil cinema and was a major commercial success.[47][48][49] Vijay's performance won him South Indian International Movie Awards.[50][51] He played triple roles for the first time in Mersal (2017), his second collaboration with Atlee.[52] In addition to garnering a UK Award for Best Actor,[53][54] the film collected ₹2.5 billion.[55] Vijay earned positive critical acclaim for Bairavaa (2017) and Sarkar (2018).[56][57] He also starred in films Bigil (2019), Master (2021), Beast (2022) and Varisu (2023) which received mixed reviews, but became commercially successful.[58][59]
Films
† | Denotes films that have not yet been released |
- All films are in Tamil, unless otherwise noted.
Year | Title | Role(s) | Notes | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Vetri | Amudhan | Child artist | [1] [60] |
Kudumbam | Narada | Child artist | [1] [60] | |
1985 | Naan Sigappu Manithan | Vijay | Cameo intro song appearance as a child artist | [1] [60] |
1986 | Vasantha Raagam | Vijay | Uncredited role as a child artist | [1] [60] |
1987 | Sattam Oru Vilaiyattu | Raja | Child artist | [1] [60] |
1988 | Ithu Engal Neethi | Vijay | Uncredited role as a child artist | [61] |
1992 | Naalaiya Theerpu | Vijay | [62] | |
1993 | Sendhoorapandi | Vijay | [3] [63] | |
1994 | Rasigan | Vijay | [64] | |
1995 | Deva | Deva | [3] [65] | |
Rajavin Parvaiyile | Raja | [1] | ||
Vishnu | Vishnu (Krishna)[a] | [66] | ||
Chandralekha | Rahim | [67] | ||
1996 | Coimbatore Mappillai | Balu | [68] | |
Poove Unakkaga | Raja | [69] | ||
Vasantha Vaasal | Vijay | [70] | ||
Maanbumigu Maanavan | Sivaraj | [71] | ||
Selva | Selvan | [65] | ||
1997 | Kaalamellam Kaathiruppen | Kannan | [65] | |
Love Today | Ganesh | [72] | ||
Once More | Vijay | [73] | ||
Nerrukku Ner | Vijay | [70] | ||
Kadhalukku Mariyadhai | Jeevanandham (Jeeva) | [74] | ||
1998 | Ninaithen Vandhai | Gokulakrishnan | [75] | |
Priyamudan | Vasanth | [76] | ||
Nilaave Vaa | Siluvai | [77] | ||
1999 | Thulladha Manamum Thullum | Kutty | [78] | |
Endrendrum Kadhal | Vijay | [70] | ||
Nenjinile | Karunakaran (Karna) | [79] | ||
Minsara Kanna | Kannan (Kasi)[a] | [80] [81] | ||
2000 | Kannukkul Nilavu | Gautham | [82] | |
Kushi | Shiva | [83] | ||
Priyamaanavale | Vijay | [84] | ||
2001 | Friends | Aravindhan | [85] | |
Badri | Sri Badrinatha Moorthy (Badri) | [86] | ||
Shahjahan | Ashok | [87] [88] | ||
2002 | Thamizhan | Surya | [89] | |
Youth | Shiva | [90] | ||
Bagavathi | Bhagavathi | [91] | ||
2003 | Vaseegara | Boopathy | [92] | |
Pudhiya Geethai | Sarathi | [93] | ||
Thirumalai | Thirumalai | [94] | ||
2004 | Udhaya | Udhayakumaran (Udhaya) | [95] | |
Ghilli | Saravanavelu (Velu, Ghilli)[a] | [96] | ||
Madhurey | Maduravel (Madhurey) | [97] | ||
2005 | Thirupaachi | Sivagiri (Giri) | [22] | |
Sukran | Sukran | Cameo | [98] [99] | |
Sachein | Sachein | [100] | ||
Sivakasi | Muthappa (Sivakasi)[a] | [101] | ||
2006 | Aathi | Aathi | [102] | |
2007 | Pokkiri | Sathyamoorthy (Thamizh)[a] | [103] [104] | |
Azhagiya Tamil Magan | Guru, Prasad[b] | [105] | ||
2008 | Kuruvi | Vetrivel (Velu, Kuruvi) | [106] | |
Pandhayam | Himself | Guest appearance | [107] | |
2009 | Villu | Pugazh, Saravanan[b] | [108] | |
Vettaikaaran | Ravi | [109] | ||
2010 | Sura | Sura | [110] | |
2011 | Kaavalan | Bhoominathan (Bhoomi) | [111] | |
Velayudham | Velu (Velayudham) | [112] | ||
2012 | Nanban | Kosaksi Pasapugazh (Panchavan Parivendan)[a] | [113] [114] | |
Rowdy Rathore | Himself | Hindi film; Guest appearance in the song "Chinta Ta" | [115] | |
Thuppakki | Jagadish Dhanapal | [39] [116] | ||
2013 | Thalaivaa | Vishwa Ramadorai (Vishwa Bhai) | [117] | |
2014 | Jilla | Shakthi Aarumugam (Jilla) | [118] [119] | |
Kaththi | Kathiresan (Kaththi), Jeevanandham[b] | [42] [120] | ||
2015 | Puli | Marudheeran, Pulivendhan[b] | [121] [122] | |
2016 | Theri | Vijay Kumar (Joseph Kuruvilla, Dharmeshwar)[a] | [123] | |
2017 | Bairavaa | Bairavaa | [124] | |
Mersal | Vetri, Maaran, Vetrimaaran[c] | [52] [125] | ||
2018 | Sarkar | Sundar Ramaswamy | [126] | |
2019 | Bigil | Michael Rayappan (Bigil), Rayappan[b] | [127] | |
2021 | Master | John Durairaj (JD) | [128] | |
2022 | Beast | Veera Raghavan | [129] | |
2023 | Varisu | Vijay Rajendran | [130] | |
Jawan † | TBA | Hindi Film, Cameo Appearance | ||
Leo † | Leo | Filming | [131] |
See also
Notes
References
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