InfotainmentBharathiraja, pioneer of Tamil rural cinema, dies at 84

Bharathiraja, pioneer of Tamil rural cinema, dies at 84

Bharathiraja, the Indian filmmaker whose rural dramas reshaped Tamil cinema across nearly five decades, died on Wednesday in Chennai from age-related illness. He was 84.
Born Chinnasamy Periyamaya Theva on July 17, 1941, in Allinagaram in what is now Theni district of Tamil Nadu, Bharathiraja worked primarily in India’s Tamil-language film industry as a director, producer, screenwriter and actor. He made his feature debut in 1977 with “16 Vayathinile,” a rural romantic drama starring Kamal Haasan, Sridevi, and Rajinikanth. The production broke with studio-bound convention – it was one of the first Tamil rural films shot predominantly on location – and audiences responded, giving it a long run in theaters.
The film’s commercial and critical success set off a broader shift in Tamil cinema toward stories rooted in village life, and Bharathiraja built on it with a string of acclaimed titles through the late 1970s and 1980s. He demonstrated range early, pivoting from rural romance to the psychothriller “Sigappu Rojakkal” and the formally adventurous “Nizhalgal” before returning to his signature territory with “Alaigal Oivathillai,” “Mann Vasanai,” and “Muthal Mariyathai.” His casting philosophy also broke convention: he brought actors to the screen without heavy cosmetics and chose actresses whose appearance differed sharply from the fair-skinned ideal that then prevailed in mainstream Tamil films.
He was known for launching careers. Actor Karthik made his screen debut in “Alaigal Oivathillai,” while Radha, Revathi, Radhika, and Vijayashanti were among the other performers who got early opportunities under his direction.
His work accumulated national recognition across four decades. He won the Indian National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Telugu for “Seethakoka Chilaka” (1982); Best Feature Film in Tamil for “Muthal Mariyathai” (1986); Best Film on Other Social Issues for “Vedham Pudhithu” (1988); Best Film on Family Welfare for “Karuththamma” (1995); Best Feature Film in Tamil again for “Anthimanthaarai” (1996); and Best Screenplay for “Kadal Pookkal” (2001) – six National Awards in total. He also collected four Filmfare Awards South, six Tamil Nadu State Film Awards, and a Nandi Award. The Government of India honored him with the Padma Shri in 2004.
Bharathiraja earned the honorific Iyakkunar Imayam – pinnacle of directors. His later work showed continued commercial instinct; “Kizhakku Cheemaiyile” connected with a new generation of audiences in the 1990s, as did the award-winning “Karuththamma.” Both films are rural dramas. (Variety)

EDITOR PICKS

Replacement ideology

India or Bharat, as the ruling dispensation increasingly insists- is undergoing a profound mutation in its civic and political life. What was once a pluralist democracy is now bending under the weight of political hegemony. If the ruling party has m...