K. S. Ravikumar

(Redirected from K.S. Ravikumar)

K. S. Ravikumar (born 30 May 1958) is an Indian film director, film producer, screenwriter and actor who primarily works in Tamil cinema and few Telugu films. He is one of the most commercially successful directors of indian cinema.

K. S. Ravikumar
Ravikumar in 2013
Born
K. S. Ravikumar

(1958-05-30) 30 May 1958 (age 66)[1]
NationalityIndian
Occupation(s)Film director, Film producer, Screenwriter, Actor
Years active1990–present
SpouseKarpagam Ravikumar
Children3

Career

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1990–1997

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Ravikumar assisted various directors such as Bharathiraja, Vikraman, E. Ramdoss, Nagesh, Ramarajan and K. Rangaraj. Ravikumar worked as co-director on R. B. Choudary's production Pudhu Vasantham directed by Vikraman and the success of the film prompted the producer to give Ravikumar a chance to make his directorial debut.[2] Ravikumar thus debuted as a film maker through Puriyaadha Pudhir (1990), a crime thriller starring Rahman and Raghuvaran. A remake of the Kannada film Tarka, the film won positive reviews upon release and remains as Ravikumar's only film outside the masala film genre.[3] The success of the film meant that Ravikumar was able to expand his team of assistants and shortly after began work on a film under the same production house titled Pudhu Kaaviyam with Vikram in the lead role, though the venture was later shelved. He subsequently switched his genre of films to make a series of village action entertainers and regularly collaborated with actor Sarath Kumar, scoring successes with Cheran Pandiyan (1991) and Nattamai (1994), after which he became a highly sought after film maker in the Tamil film industry.[4]

Ravikumar then signed on to make Muthu (1995), adapting Priyadarshan's Malayalam film Thenmavin Kombath, for a film produced by K. Balachander and starring Rajinikanth. Despite buying the official remake rights, he worked on his own screenplay, and the film consequently went on to gain "cult classic" status in India and Japan, as well as becoming one of the most profitable Tamil films till date at release.[5] Soon after he worked with Kamal Haasan for the first time in Avvai Shanmugi (1996), an Indian adaptation of the American comedy film, Mrs. Doubtfire. The film, also featuring Meena and Gemini Ganesan, won positive reviews and performed well at the box office. The Hindu praised the film claiming "turns out to be entertainer, mouthful from start to finish".[6][7] The success of his two films with the two leading Tamil actors prompted further opportunities in big productions in 1997, notably Vijayakanth's Dharma Chakkaram and the comedy Pistha featuring Karthik.[8]

1998–2010

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Ravikumar with Rajinikanth at Lingaa shooting

In December 1997, Ravikumar announced his next project Padayappa (1999) would feature Rajinikanth again as the lead actor with Sivaji Ganesan also in a pivotal role. Though principal photography for the film was supposed to have started in April 1998, the FEFSI strike that took place at that time delayed the project. After the strike ended, Ravikumar was able to complete Arjun's Kondattam and the successful drama with Sarath Kumar, Natpukkaga (1998). The film was further delayed when Ravikumar accepted to quickly remake Natpukkaga in Telugu as Sneham Kosam (1999) with Chiranjeevi in the lead.[9] The shoot of Padayappa began in November 1998 and was subsequently completed in three months, with the film became a blockbuster upon release, as well as earning positive reviews from critics. Following the success of Padayappa, producer K. R. Gangadharan signed Ravikumar to direct a film and was insistent that the title should be Minsara Kanna (1999), after the popular song from Ravikumar's earlier film. His only collaboration with actor Vijay till date, the film opened to below average reviews collections.[10] He then completed the village action film Paattali (1999) with Sarath Kumar within a month, as well as directing a portion of the record-breaking comedy drama Suyamvaram, bringing his release count for the year to five.[11] Ravikumar consequently worked on his first home production through the comedy film Thenali (2000), starring Kamal Haasan in the titular role. While his wife Karpagam produced the film under his home studio RK Celluloids, Ravikumar worked on the screenplay and direction for the film also starring Jayaram, Jyothika and Devayani. Completing the film swiftly despite avid publicity, Thenali won critical and commercial acclaim, prompting grand felicitations of the director at the success meet.[12][13] In 2001, he had two releases; the Telugu marital comedy Bava Nachadu and the family drama Samudhiram, in which he worked with Sarath Kumar again.

In 2002, Ravikumar made a third collaboration with Kamal Haasan through the comedy drama Panchathanthiram, which was produced by his manager P. L. Thenappan. Telling the story of five friends and a trip to Bangalore which goes awry, the film opened to rave reviews and made profits at the box office.[14] Villain (2002), his first film featuring Ajith Kumar, was shot swiftly within forty days and also became a blockbuster upon release. He later remade the film in Telugu in 2003 under the same name with Rajasekhar in the lead role, after finishing Paarai (2003), another village action film with Sarath Kumar. In 2004, he began production on a third film starring Rajinikanth titled Jaggubhai. Ravikumar spent six months on pre-production works and missed out on the opportunity to direct Kamal Haasan in Vasool Raja MBBS during the period, but the film was later shelved after a photo shoot. Rajinikanth had asked for changes to the script and after several months of tinkering, the pair decided to part ways and abandon the project.[15] He moved on to make Aethiree (2004), a film about an imposter gangster with Madhavan, before agreeing terms with NIC Arts to make a follow-up film with Ajith Kumar in three roles from November 2004, after Villain's success. Despite beginning production soon after the launch, financial problems meant that it progressed slowly and Varalaru, only had a theatrical release in late 2006. The film, however, won positive reviews and became the blockbuster hit for Ajith until that date. In between, he worked quickly on another action drama, Saravana (2006) with Silambarasan, a remake of the Telugu film Bhadra (2005).[16][17]

Ravikumar collaborated with Kamal Haasan again in the high-budget venture Dasavathaaram (2008), where the actor portrayed ten different roles. Revealing that the film was an action adventure, encompassing mankind's concern for the environment, science and faith, Dasavathaaram became Ravikumar's most expensive and lengthy shoot till date. The film opened to positive reviews and became the most profitable Tamil film of 2008, with Ravikumar's work garnering a Filmfare Best Tamil Director Award nomination.[18] Aadhavan (2009) featuring Suriya and Nayantara was his next release, and it saw him return to his standard "commercial packaging" and the film performed well at the box office.[19] His shelved venture, the family-drama Jaggubhai (2010), re-began shoot with Sarath Kumar and Shriya Saran in mid 2008 but delays meant that the film was only released in January 2010, after a leaked copy had found itself online.[20] He made a further collaboration with Kamal Haasan again in the romantic comedy Manmadan Ambu (2010), though the film opened to mixed reviews and collections.[21]

2013–present

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After he completed his work, he began production on his first Hindi film, adapting director Hari's Tamil film Saamy (2003) in a venture titled Policegiri (2013) with Sanjay Dutt in the lead role. However, despite a high profile launch, production was troubled as a result of Dutt's impending arrest. Subsequently, the film was rushed with Ravikumar only able to use ten days of Dutt's forty-day schedule for the film, and the director noted he mentally prepared himself for the subsequent box office failure.[22] In January 2014, a felicitation event titled Endrendrum Ravikumar was held at the Nehru Indoor Stadium marking the director's 25th year in the industry and was attended by several of Ravikumar's contemporaries and colleagues.[23] Following the completion of Kochadaiiyaan, Ravikumar began work on a new venture titled Lingaa (2014) with Rajinikanth, rather than reviving Rana. Signing on Anushka Shetty and Sonakshi Sinha in other lead roles, production began in May 2014 and period scenes were shot around sets in Karnataka. The film was completed in a period of 120 days, considerably shorter than any other film of equal budget or film starring Rajinikanth in recent times and opened to successful collections commercially. Prior to release, Ravikumar and his scriptwriter Ponkumaran, successfully evaded legal action from claims of plagiarism regarding the script.[22] He has directed featuring Sudeep, Kotigobba 2 in Kannada language as the lead role. The film have been successful in their industry.[24][25] He later directed two Telugu actions films with Nandamuri Balakrishna in Jai Simha (2018) and Ruler (2019).[26][27]

He has since acted in several films and played the lead in Mathil (2021).[28]

Style of working

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Production

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Ravikumar's films are usually in the masala genre,[29] with action, family sentiment, comedy, betrayal, revenge and redemption appearing as key themes. The decision against marking art films was a self-made decision, despite making his debut with a significantly different thriller in Puriyaadha Pudhir.[22][30] Ravikumar has often associated with the same team of writers and assistants since his early career, with actor-director Ramesh Khanna being a near constant fixture in his team since a shelved venture titled Pudhu Kaaviyam was announced in 1990.[31][32] Rather than considering his original storylines, Ravikumar has primarily gathered plots from other writers, refined them and adapted them into screenplays. He has also regularly associated with Erode Soundar in village action films, M. A. Kennedy in romantic comedies and Crazy Mohan in ventures featuring Kamal Haasan. Ravikumar often works on the script with his own story discussion team, away from his assistant directors, revealing that writing was "a personal process". However, for the production of Lingaa (2014), he revealed that the rush to finish the film by December 2014, meant he was unable to stay solely focused on the script and ventured out to help his assistants scout locations and arrange schedules.[22]

Ravikumar is renowned for his quick schedules and his prompt completion of films, with Sify noting he is often considered a "film producer's delight" for his ability to stay within time and budget allotments.[33] He made an exception for his quick paced schedules with Kamal Haasan's Dasavathaaram (2008), indicating it was significantly more difficult to make than his previous ventures and involved extensive simultaneous CGI work to production.[18] The shooting for Lingaa, one of the most expensive films in Tamil film history, was completed within 120 days. The duration was significantly smaller than any other Tamil film of equal budget, as well as for any recent film starring a leading actor, such as Rajinikanth, in the main role.[22] Ravikumar has also made cameo appearances in most of his directorial ventures, likening them to Alfred Hitchcock's cameo appearances.[30]

Approach to actors

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Ravikumar has often chosen to work with established actors rather than newcomers, indicating that they are commercially more viable than newcomers, and are easier to handle them as they are more experienced.[33] He has regularly worked on his scripts only after finalising the lead actor, adding changes in the original plot line in order to blend it into the actor's image.[34] Describing his collaborations with Rajinikanth, Ravikumar noted he ensured that each scene was discussed with the actor during the making of Padayappa (1999) and that Rajinikanth decided exactly where to place punch dialogues in order to attract audiences.[33] Referring to his work with Kamal Haasan, he noted that the actor would describe a detailed scene on how to make his core audience of "city-slickers" laugh during the making of Thenali (2000) and Panchatanthiram (2002), and then request Ravikumar to add a slapstick element to make it applicable to village audiences too.[33] Ravikumar has also often collaborated with Sarath Kumar, who has since dedicated his success to the director's opportunities, with the pair working on several quickly shot village action films in the 1990s.[23]

Ravikumar's temper with technicians has often been described to be "constantly on the edge", with assistant directors often remarking that Ravikumar yells regularly on set to ensure the production team work more efficiently. Director Cheran revealed that during his stint as an assistant director, he fell out with Ravikumar and was subsequently left out of the team of Purusha Lakshanam (1993) after irking the director.[22]

Filmography

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Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released
  • All films are in Tamil, unless otherwise noted.

As director

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Year Film Role Notes
1990 Puriyaadha Pudhir Cellmate
1991 Cheran Pandiyan Sundaram
Putham Pudhu Payanam Sivalingam
1992 Oor Mariyadhai Rakappan
Pondatti Rajyam Site Supervisor
1993 Suriyan Chandiran
Band Master Band Master
Purusha Lakshanam Photographer
1994 Sakthivel
Nattamai Villager Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film
Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Director
1995 Muthukulikka Vaariyala Army officer
Periya Kudumbam Financial partner
Muthu Landlord in Kerala
1996 Parambarai
Avvai Shanmugi Market man
1997 Dharma Chakkaram Inspector
Pistha Guitarist
1998 Kondattam Photographer
Natpukkaga Limping priest Filmfare Award for Best Film – Tamil
Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film
1999 Sneham Kosam Airport passenger, Limping priest Telugu film; Remake of Natpukkaga; dual role
Padayappa guest at Anitha's Birthday party Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film
Suyamvaram
Minsara Kanna Company GM
Paattali Flower Decorator
2000 Thenali Himself 25th Film
2001 Bava Nachadu ATV driver Telugu
Samudhiram Brahmin
2002 Panchathantiram Flight captain Kumar
Villain Man requesting a photo
2003 Paarai Building contractor
Villain Himself Telugu
Remake of the 2002 Tamil film of the same name
2004 Aethiree Bachelor
2006 Saravana Train passenger
Varalaru Family doctor Vijay Award for Favourite Director
2008 Dasavathaaram Dancer ITFA Best Director Award
Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film
Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Film
Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Director
Nominated, Filmfare Award for Best Director
2009 Aadhavan New servant Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Film
Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Director
2010 Jaggubhai Airport supervisor
Manmadhan Ambu Himself
2013 Policegiri Drunk guest Hindi
Remake of Saamy
2014 Lingaa "Finishing" Kumar Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Director
2016 Kotigobba 2 / Mudinja Ivana Pudi Dancer in song "Kotigobba / Aisalamma" Kannada & Tamil Bilingual
2018 Jai Simha Court Judge Telugu film
2019 Ruler Telugu film[35]

As producer

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Year Film Notes
2000 Thenali co-produced with R.Karpagam
2022 Koogle Kuttappa Coproduced with Kallal Global Entertainment
2024 Hitlist Co-Produced With Ramesh Grand Creations

As writer

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Year Film Director Note
2014 Kochadaiyaan Soundarya Rajnikanth Story, Screenplay, Dialogues[36]

As actor

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Year Film Role Note
1986 Aayiram Pookkal Malarattum Mohan's friend Uncredited
1989 Raaja Raajathan Priest Uncredited
1990 Pudhu Vasantham Watchman Uncredited
1991 Cheran Pandiyan Sundaram
1993 Madhumathi
1997 Pagaivan Durairaj
1998 Golmaal ACP Bike Pandian (Periya Pandi) and Chinna Pandi
Santhosham
1999 Ponnu Veetukkaran Manogar
2000 Kannaal Pesavaa
2001 Dosth Himself
2002 Thamizh Police Inspector
Kadhal Virus Himself
2003 Indru Mudhal Doctor
2004 Arul Union Leader (Vikram's brother -in-law)
2006 Thalai Nagaram Assistant Commissioner
2007 Thottal Poo Malarum Taxi driver
2009 Satrumun Kidaitha Thagaval Manickavel
2010 Vinnaithaandi Varuvaaya Himself
2013 Onbadhule Guru DSP Balram Naidu
2014 Inga Enna Solluthu Himself
Ninaithathu Yaaro Himself
Sigaram Thodu Ravi
Aadama Jaichomada K. Sathyamoorthy
2015 Thanga Magan Vijayraghavan
2016 Rekka Ratna, Shiva's father
Remo Himself
2017 En Aaloda Seruppa Kaanom Politician
Maayavan Minister
Palli Paruvathile Sarangan
2019 Ayogya Head Constable Abdul Kader
Comali MLA Dharmaraj
2020 Ayya Ullen Ayya
Naan Sirithal Dilli Babu
2021 Mathil Lakshmikanthan
Maaligai O. K. Kumar
Obama Ungalukkaaga
2022 Koogle Kuttappa Subramani
Maayon Vasudevan
Cobra Nellaiappan
Miral Rama's father
Varalaru Mukkiyam Gopal
2023 Ghosty Dass
Japan Minister Pazhanisamy
80s Buildup Yama
Annapoorani 'Arusuvai' Annamalai
Sarakku Judge
2024 Lal Salaam Ra. Sathyamoorthy
Aranmanai 4 DSP Jagadeesan
Saamaniyan Murugavel
Vasco Da Gama Uthaman (Marco) & Binu (Gabbar)
Andhagan Dr. Sami
Kanguva

Television

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Year Television show Role Network
2024 Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Seniors 4 Guest Zee Tamil
2024 Super Singer Season 10 Guest Star Vijay
2023 Kadhaippoma Cameo YouTube

(Chapter - 10 )

References

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  1. ^ "TANTIS". 23 October 2012. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  2. ^ "ரவிக்குமாரின் நிலைமை தலைகீழான கதை". Kalki (in Tamil). 21 May 1995. pp. 29–30. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  3. ^ "KS Ravikumar Birthday Feature". Silverscreen.in. 30 May 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  4. ^ "Its a special day for KSRavikumar – Tamil Movie News". IndiaGlitz.com. 30 May 2014. Archived from the original on 2 June 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  5. ^ "Rediff On The NeT, Movies: Pioneer Muthu". M.rediff.com. 18 June 1999. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
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  8. ^ "Pistha Movie Review". www.indolink.com. Archived from the original on 20 April 1999.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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  10. ^ "Rediff On The NeT, Movies: Gossip from the southern film industry". M.rediff.com. 2 July 1999. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
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  12. ^ "Latest News". Pvv.ntnu.no. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  13. ^ "rediff.com, Movies: Showbuzz! The story of a kiss! Kamal and Jyotika". M.rediff.com. 21 September 2000. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  14. ^ "Panchathanthiram Review – Tamil Movie Panchathanthiram Nowrunning Review". Nowrunning.com. 6 June 2002. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
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  16. ^ "Ajith all the way in Varalaaru". Rediff.com. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  17. ^ "In the race, surely – Varalaaru". Thehindu.com. 27 October 2006. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  18. ^ a b "Welcome to". Sify. 20 January 2007. Archived from the original on 13 June 2008. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
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  20. ^ "SarathRadhika in tears: Stars support – Tamil Movie News". IndiaGlitz.com. 5 January 2010. Archived from the original on 14 January 2010. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  21. ^ "Kamal Haasan delivers with Manmadhan Ambu – Rediff.com Movies". Rediff.com. 23 December 2010. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  22. ^ a b c d e f "Above and Beyond: The KS Ravikumar Interview". Silverscreen.in. 22 December 2014. Archived from the original on 2 January 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  23. ^ a b Udhav Naig (10 January 2014). "Time for a flashback". Thehindu.com. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  24. ^ "Mudinja Ivana Pudi review. Mudinja Ivana Pudi Tamil movie review, story, rating". IndiaGlitz.com. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  25. ^ "Movie Review: Kotigobba 2". Bangalore Mirror. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  26. ^ "Jai Simha review. Jai Simha Telugu movie review, story, rating".
  27. ^ "Balakrishna Ruler Telugu Movie Review". 21 December 2019.
  28. ^ "Mathil Movie Review: KS Ravikumar just about salvages a middling good-intentioned drama". Cinema Express.
  29. ^ "KS Ravikumar: Pariyerum Perumal is a masala film". Cinema Express. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  30. ^ a b Pillai, Sreedhar (30 October 2002). "Giving hits, his speciality". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 16 January 2004. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  31. ^ "இப்படி ஒரு கிராஃப் தமிழ் சினிமாவில் ஒரே ஒருத்தருக்கு மட்டும்தான் இருக்கு! - ரமேஷ் கண்ணா எழுதும் திரையிடாத நினைவுகள் #9". Nakkheeran (in Tamil). 4 September 2018. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  32. ^ சனா (2 July 2020). ""கமல் சார், என்னை டக்குனு தூக்கிப்போட்டுட்டார்!"- ரமேஷ் கண்ணா #Panchathanthiram". Ananda Vikatan (in Tamil). Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  33. ^ a b c d "Welcome to". Sify. 20 January 2007. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  34. ^ Srinivasan, Sudhir (13 August 2016). "Cinema is just business". The Hindu. Retrieved 9 June 2020 – via www.thehindu.com.
  35. ^ "Balakrishna starrer Ruler wraps up its Thailand schedule". The Times of India. 30 August 2019.
  36. ^ "A gift to the Tamil audience: Rajinikanth". The Hindu. 9 March 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
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