All Movie: Vijay
The question haunted him. In Mersal (2017), he became three: a magician, a doctor, and a vigilante. A single film where he fought quacks, corrupt gods, and the very system that let farmers die. The industry called it over-the-top. The people called it truth. Vijay realized: his fans didn’t just want songs and fights. They wanted a weapon.
He tasted it in Thuppakki (2012). No longer just a hero, he became Jagadish, a sleeper cell hunter. The dancing boy had grown into a man who planned his punches. The audience gasped. Then came Kaththi (2014) – a double role that split him in two: a common man versus a corporate devil. He looked into the mirror of his own fame and asked, “Who are you, Vijay? Entertainer or revolutionary?” vijay all movie
“Not every star becomes a constellation. But every Vijay film was a galaxy where the common man found his gravity.” The question haunted him
So he sharpened himself. Master (2021) was the turning point. He played JD, an alcoholic professor broken by guilt, thrown into a juvenile school run by a savage warlord (Vijay Sethupathi). For the first time, Vijay lost. Badly. He was beaten, humiliated, and made to bleed on screen. But from that blood, he rose not as a star, but as a mentor. He taught the boys one lesson: “Violence isn’t strength. Purpose is.” The industry called it over-the-top
The screen fades to black. A title card appears:
And then came the final chapter – The Greatest of All Time (2024). Here, Vijay played an aging agent, betrayed by his own reflection (a younger clone). It was a battle not just with a villain, but with time, legacy, and the fear of irrelevance. In the end, he didn’t defeat the clone with a punch. He hugged him. “You are me,” he said. “And I am tired.”