Posted by: gmsaravana | December 23, 2009

Download New Movies & Songs

Download Vettaikaran Movie from the below links

Filename…………………………….: Vettaikaran_RealTC_Xvid_1CD_Mp3.avi

Size………………………………..: 699 MB

Genre……………………………….: Action | Romance | Comedy

Video……………………………….: XviD |

Directed By………………………….: Babu Sivan

Starring…………………………….: Vijay, Anushka Shetty


Part 1:

Part 2:

Part 3:

Part 4:

Part 5:

Part 6:

Part 7:

Download Kutty MP3 Songs

Banner: Gimini Films
Cast: Dhanush & Shereya
Direction: Mitran Jawahar
Production: Bala Subramaniyam
Music: Devi Sri Prasad
Lyricis: Veveka, Selvaragavan & Thamarai
Released Year: Dec 2009
Language : Tamil

Source : CD
Ripper Mod : EAC (Secure Mode) / Lame 3.99a & Asus CD-S520
Lame : 3.99a
Version : MPEG 1 Layer III
Encoding Bitrate : Extreame,VBR(AVG.Bitrate : 289Kps)
Sample Size : 16 Bit
Channels : II Stereo / 44100 hz
Tags Contains : ID3 V2.3 (ANSI) & DV3v1.0

TRACK LIST

01. Life a Jaali Than:: OSP.Raina

02. Feel My Love: K.K

03. Nee Kadhalikkum Ponnu: Mugash

04. Yaro En Nenjai: Saragar & Sainthavi

05. Feel My Love: K.K

06. Kannu Randum: PeriyaMagash & Mugash

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Avul Pakir Jainulabdeen Abdul Kalam (Tamil: அவுல் பகீர் ஜைனுலாப்தீன் அப்துல் கலாம்), born October 15, 1931, Tamil Nadu, India, usually referred to as Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, was the eleventh President of India, serving from 2002 to 2007, he was elected during the rule of the Bharatiya Janata Party, led ruling coalition, under prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. During his term as The President, he was popularly known as the People’s President.

Before his term as India’s president, he worked as an aeronautical engineer with DRDO and ISRO. He is popularly known as the Missile Man of India for his work on development of ballistic missile and space rocket technology. In India he is highly respected as a scientist and as an engineer.

Kalam played a pivotal organisational, technical and political role in India’s Pokhran-II nuclear test in 1998, the first since the original nuclear test by India in 1974. He is a professor at Anna University (Chennai) and adjunct/visiting faculty at many other academic and research institutions across India.

With the death of R. Venkataraman on January 27, 2009, Kalam became the only surviving former President of India.

 

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is none other than A.R.Rahman (.ஆர்.ரகுமான்) or Allah Rakha Rahman was born actually A. S. Dileep Kumar on the 6th of January in the year 1966, in Madras (now Chennai), to a musically affluent Tamil Mudaliar family. The second of four children he had three sisters Kanchana, Bala (now Talat) and Israth, Kanchana being elder and the other two younger. His father R.K. Sekhar was a composer, arranger and conductor in Malayalam movies and had worked under the likes of Salil Chowdhary and Devarajan. His mother was Kasthuri (now Kareema Begum). Dileep’s baptism in music happened early in life. Dileep’s earliest memories of the studio are with his father. On one of those visits, a music director Sudarshanam Master found the four year old playing a tune on the harmonium. He covered the keys with a cloth. It made no difference. Dileep replayed the tune effortlessly. This impressed the music director who suggested that he be trained in music. Dileep started learning the piano at the tender age of four. He recieved his early training in music from Dhanraj Master.
But he wanted to grow up to be an electronics or computer engineer. He says today, in reminiscence “I was not crazy after music. I was more interested in technology”. He was first drawn to music strongly when his father bought a synthesiser, one of the very first in film circles then, from Singapore. Till then he now says, “As a child, music seemed to be a means of earning bread and butter. I had no special fascination for it… it was associated purely with work. Yet I couldn’t take my eyes away from the synthesiser, it was like a forbidden toy.” This instrument was an object of much curiosity to the young Dileep and caught his fancy. Dileep used to spend hours experimenting with the novel instrument. This instrument was to shape the future of this child. It was perhaps divinely ordained that the synthesiser would become Dileep’s favourite instrument since it was the ideal combination of music and technology.

Rahman’s early years were one of struggle and hardships. At the age of 11, his father passed away following a mysterious illness with rumours abounding that he was the victim of black magic practised by his rivals. Unfortunately R. K. Shekhar passed away the very same day his first film as composer was released. It was at this time that Rahman’s belief in God first took a beating. Much of his time was filled with hospital visits, pain and anxieties. It is an issue that Rahman outrightly refuses to discuss even today. After his father’s death the pressure of supporting his family fell on the young Dileep. At first the family subsisted by lending out his father’s musical instruments.

It was his mother Kareema Begum who encouraged him to follow in his father’s footsteps and fully supported him in his vocation. But all this had an adverse effect on his formal education. Infrequent attendance and an unaccommodative management forced him to shift schools from the prestigious Padma Seshadri Bal Bhavan to the Madras Christian College and finally he dropped out of school altogether when he was doing his 11th grade.

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Aishwarya Rai Bachchan (born Aishwarya Rai, and sometimes known simply as Ash or Aish, Tulu: ಐಶ್ವರ್ಯಾ ರೈ; 1 November 1973) is an Indian actress and former Miss World. Before starting her acting career, she worked as a model and gained fame after winning the Miss World title in 1994.

Often cited by the media as the most beautiful woman in the world, Rai made her movie debut in Mani Ratnam’s Tamil film Iruvar (1997) and had her first commercial success in the Tamil movie Jeans (1998). She came to the attention of Bollywood in the movie Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam (1999), directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali. Her performance in the film won her the Filmfare Best Actress Award. In 2002 she appeared in Bhansali’s next project, Devdas (2002), for which she won her second Best Actress Award at the Filmfare. After a low phase in her career during 2003-2005, she appeared in the blockbuster Dhoom 2 (2006), which turned out to be her biggest Bollywood commercial success. She later appeared in films like Guru (2007) and Jodhaa Akbar (2008), which were commercially successful and got her critical acclaim. Rai has thus established herself as one of the leading contemporary actresses in the Indian film industry.

During her career, Rai has acted in over forty movies in Hindi, English, Tamil and Bengali including the international productions Bride & Prejudice (2003), The Mistress of Spices (2005), The Last Legion (2007) and The Pink Panther 2 (2009) in English.

 

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Is none other than Saravanan “Surya” Sivakumar (Tamil: சரவணன் “சூர்யா” சிவகுமார்) (born July 23, 1975) is an award- winning Tamil film actor. Son of actor Sivakumar, his majore hits are Nandha, Kaakha Kaakha, Ghajini, Perazhagan, Pithamagan, Vaaranam Aayiram and Ayan. As of 2009, he has won three Tamil Nadu State Film Awards and three Filmfare Awards. He became a film distributor after opening Studio Green, which distributed several of his earlier films. He married actress Jyothika Saravanan in 2006, after being engaged for several years. In 2008, he began Agaram Foundations, which funds for preventing early childhood drop-outs.

 

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Yes at the age of 16, he proved others that he is worth thousand trillion dollars and now his name is known for records and his career span may be higher than some of his team mates age, his climbed up many stones that are thrown to him and now he is the topmost cricketer that the world has seen and he is none other than – Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar, (Marathi: सचिन रमेश तेंडुलकर) (born April 24, 1973 in Mumbai). In 2002, Wisden ranked him the second greatest Test batsman of all time, next to Donald Bradman, and the second greatest one day international (ODI) batsman of all time, next to Viv Richards. In September 2007, the Australian leg spinner Shane Warne rated Tendulkar as the greatest player he has played with or against. Tendulkar was the only player of the current generation to be included in Bradman’s Eleven. His nick names are “Little Master” or “Master Blaster”, “Tendlya”, “The Master”, “The Little Champion”.


His career statistics are as below:

Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 159 430 261 517
Runs scored 12,773 16,903 21,662 20,455
Batting Avg 54.58 44.48 58.70 45.35
100s/50s 42/53 44/91 69/99 55/109
Top score 248* 186* 248* 186*
Balls bowled 3,934 8,015 7,299 10,191
Wickets 44 154 69 201
Bowling Avg 51.63 44.19 60.34 41.96
5 wickets 0 2 0 2
Best bowling 3/10 5/32 3/10 5/32
Catches 102 130 170 165

Tendulkar is the highest run scorer in both Test matches and ODIs, and also the batsman with the most centuries in either form of the game. The first player to score fifty centuries in all international cricket combined, he now has more than eighty international centuries.

On October 17, 2008, when he surpassed Brian Lara’s record for the most runs scored in Test Cricket, he also became the first batsman to score 12,000 runs in that form of the game, having also been the third batsman and first Indian to pass 11,000 runs in Test cricket. He was also the first player to score 10,000 runs in one-day internationals, and also the first player to cross every subsequent 1000-run mark that has been crossed in ODI cricket history. In the fourth Test of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy against Australia, Tendulkar surpassed Australia’s Allan Border to become the player to cross the 50-run mark the most number of times in Test cricket history, and also the second ever player to score 10 Test centuries against Australia, after only Sir Jack Hobbs of England more than 70 years back. Tendulkar has been honored with the Padma Vibhushan award, India’s second highest civilian award, and the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award, India’s highest sporting honor.

 

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is Mao Inoue, (井上 真央 Inoue Mao?, born January 9, 1987 in Yokohama) is a Japanese actress. She was a popular U-15 idol from 1999; she was well known for her role as Imai Akane in the drama Kids War. Since the age of five she had parts in several dramas, but it wasn’t until the debut of Kids War in 1999 that Japanese audiences took notice of Inoue.

In 2005, she was cast as the star of Hana Yori Dango on TBS. Inoue played Makino Tsukushi in the live-action adaptation of the manga and anime, a lower middle-class girl who is trying to survive unnoticed in an elite high school full of playboys and rich snobs. A sequel to the 2005 drama, Hana Yori Dango 2, was aired in the winter 2007 season.

At 19, Inoue was enrolled in Meiji University, studying theater and literature, with her second major is Chinese. In 2006 she co-starred in the movie Check It Out, Yo! with Ichihara Hayato, Hiraoka Yuta, and Emoto Tasuku. The film was in theaters April 22, 2006. Inoue also co-starred in the summer 2007 drama First Kiss with “Check It Out, Yo!” co-star Hiraoka.

After the success of the two Hana Yori Dango dramas, a film was announced in August 2007, just months after the end of the 2007 sequel. It will be Inoue’s first starring role in a movie, which is to be called Hana Yori Dango Final. Hana Yori Dango Final was a successful movie, opening in Beijing on June 28, 2008 in China to packed crowds and is expected to gross 10 billion yen.


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 is Jun Matsumoto (松本 潤 Matsumoto Jun?, born August 30, 1983), often called MatsuJun, is a Japanese idol, singer, actor, television personality and radio host. He is best known for being the youngest member of the popular boy band Arashi. Since the group’s debut in 1999, they have had 23 number one singles, 6 number one studio albums, 1 number one greatest hits compilation album and has sold over 10 million records in Japan alone to date. Matsumoto is also an award-winning actor and is primarily known for his roles in the Hana Yori Dango series, the first season of Gokusen, Bambino! and Smile.

Early life:

Born in Tokyo, Japan, Matsumoto is the youngest child of his parents. He has an older sister whose support of KinKi Kids influenced his decision to join Johnny’s Entertainment in 1996. Thinking it might bode good luck, he sent his application to the agency on his elementary school graduation day and received a phone call weeks later from the president himself, Johnny Kitagawa, inviting him to attend a rehearsal instead of being auditioned. Due to this, Matsumoto is frequently referred to as an elite within the agency.

Matsumoto began his career in the entertainment industry as a back-up dancer for other groups like many other Juniors in the agency before he was drafted into a five-member group named Arashi in 1999 at the age of 16. He graduated from Horikoshi Gakuen, a renowned high school known for its many performing arts alumnae, at the age of 18 with other contemporaries Kyoko Fukada and Ai Kato whom he counts as his high school senior.

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is William Wordsworth (7 April 1770 – 23 April 1850) was a major English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature with the 1798 joint publication Lyrical Ballads.

Wordsworth’s magnum opus is generally considered to be “The Prelude”, a semiautobiographical poem of his early years which the poet revised and expanded a number of times. The work was posthumously titled and published, prior to which it was generally known as the poem “to Coleridge”. Wordsworth was England’s Poet Laureate from 1843 until his death in 1850.

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Posted by: gmsaravana | January 4, 2009

Someone whose life is regarded as achievement in cine industry

Kamal Haasan (Tamil: கமல்ஹாசன்) (born November 7, 1954 in Paramakudi, Madras State, India) is an Indian film actor, script writer, and filmmaker, considered one of the leading method actors of Indian cinema. Haasan is known for winning several Indian film awards, including National Film Awards and Filmfare Awards, and has the distinction of being the actor with the most number of films submitted by India in contest for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. In addition to acting and directing, he is a screenwriter, lyricist, playback singer and choreographer. His film production company, Rajkamal International, has produced several of his films.

After several projects as a child artiste, Kamal Haasan’s breakthrough into lead acting came with his role in the 1975 drama Apoorva Raagangal, in which he played a rebellious youth in love with an older woman. He secured his first Indian National Film Award for his portrayal of a guileless school teacher who tends a child-like amnesiac in 1982’s Moondram Pirai. He was particularly noted for his performance in Mani Ratnam’s Godfatheresque Nayagan (1987), which was ranked by Time magazine as one of the best films of all time. Since then he has gone on to appear in other notable films such as his own productions, Hey Ram and Virumaandi, as well as the magnum opus Dasavathaaram, in which he appeared in ten distinct roles.

Early career: 1960s – early 1970s

Kamal Haasan made his film debut as a 6-year-old child artist, in the film Kalathur Kannamma, which was released on August 12, 1959, directed by A. Bhimsingh. He was cast along with the veteran Tamil actor Gemini Ganesan in the film, which won him the National Film Award for Best Child Artist. He acted as a child actor in five other Tamil films in the subsequent few years co-starring with Sivaji Ganesan and M. G. Ramachandran.

Following a nine year hiatus from films, to concentrate on his education as well as learning karate and Bharathanatyam, Haasan returned with a series of low budget films in 1972, in all of which he played supporting roles. These films included roles in Arangetram and Sollathaan Ninaikkiren, both co-starring Sivakumar. His final supporting role before establishing himself as a lead actor was in Naan Avanillai.

Late 1970s – 1980s

Kamal Haasan first received a regional Filmfare Award for acting for his role in the Malayalam film Kanyakumari (1974). In the next four years, he won six regional Best Actor Filmfare Awards, including four consecutive Best Tamil Actor Awards. He acted in director K. Balachander’s Apoorva Raagangal, an exploration of age-gap relationships. The late 1970s was a period that saw Kamal Haasan’s frequent collaboration with K. Balachander, who also cast him in many of his socially-themed films such as Avargal (1977). The film won Haasan his first Filmfare Best Tamil Actor Award. In 1976, Haasan appeared in the drama Moondru Mudichu with Rajinikanth and Sridevi, another K. Balachander film, Manmadha Leelai, and Oru Oodhappu Kan Simittugiradhu, which won him his second consecutive Best Actor Award. 16 Vayathinile won him his third consecutive award, where he appeared as an mentally ill villager, once again alongside Rajinikanth and Sridevi. The fourth consecutive award came with Sigappu Rojakal in which he appeared as an anti-hero who is a psychopathic sexual killer. In the late seventies, Haasan appeared in other films such as the comedy, Ninaithale Inikkum and the horror film, Neeya.

Haasan’s pairing with the actress Sridevi continued with Guru and Varumayin Niram Sigappu in 1980. Kamal Haasan also made guest–cameo appearances, such as in the Rajnikanth film Thillu Mullu; Rajinikanth had previously appeared in some of Kamal Haasan’s previous films. Haasan’s 100th career film appearance was in 1981’s Raja Paarvai, which also marked his debut in film production. Despite this film’s relatively poor reception at the cinemas, his portrayal of a blind session violinist earned him a Filmfare Award. His next acting role, in Ek Duuje Ke Liye, became his first Hindi-language film. It was the remake of his previous Telugu-language film, Maro Charithra by K. Balachandar. Following a year of starring in commercially-oriented films, Haasan won his first of three National Awards for Best Actor with his portrayal of a school teacher who looks after a mentally retarded girl in Balu Mahendra’s Moondram Pirai, alter reprising the role in the Hindi version, Sadma. In 1983, Haasan appeared in Thoongadhey Thambi Thoongadhey playing a double role.

Kamal Haasan in Mani Ratnam’s, Nayagan, which fetched him his second National Film Award for Best Actor

Till 1985, Haasan began to appear in more Hindi language films, including Saagar, for which he was awarded both the Filmfare Best Actor Award and the Best Supporting Actor Award, making him the first actor to win both awards for a single film. Saagar portrayed him alongisde Rishi Kapoor both of whom were pinning for a woman, but Haasan ultimately loses out. Haasan also appeared in Geraftaar. He featured in Tamil cinema’s first sequel Japanil Kalyanaraman, which followed up his previous, Kalyanaraman as well as acting in Uruvangal Maralam co-starring Sivaji Ganesan and Rajinikanth.

In the mid-1980s, Haasan appeared in two Telugu language films, Sagara Sangamam and Swathi Muthyam with director, Kasinadhuni Viswanath. The latter film was India’s representative for the Academy Award for the Best Foreign Language Film in 1986. Whilst, the former film portrayed Haasan as a drunkard classical dancer, Swathi Muthyam portrays him as an autistic person attempting to change society. Following Punnagai Mannan, in which he portrays dual roles including a satire of Charlie Chaplin and Vetri Vizha as an amnesiac, Haasan appeared in Mani Rathnam’s 1987 film Nayagan. Nayagan portrays the life of an underworld don in Bombay. The story revolves around the life of a real-life underworld don called Varadarajan Mudaliar, whilst sympathetically depicting the struggle of South Indians living in Mumbai. Haasan received a Indian National Award for his performance and Nayagan was nominated by India as its entry for the Best Foreign Language Film for the Academy Awards in 1987 as well as being included in the Time top 100 movies list. In 1988, Haasan appeared in his only silent film to date; appearing in the black comedy, Pushpak.[ In 1989, Haasan played a triple role in Apoorva Sagodharargal. The commercial film portrayed him in a role as a dwarf. He then attempted dual roles in Indrudu Chandrudu and its Tamil remake, winning the regional Best Actor Award for his performance.

Kamal Haasan in his yet-to-be-completed Marudhanayagam

Michael Madhana Kamarajan in 1991 saw Haasan go one step further, acting in four different roles as quadruplets, the film started an ongoing collabaration for comedy films between Haasan and Crazy Mohan, a dialogue writer. Haasan won successive best actor awards for his portrayal of the protagonist in Guna and in Thevar Magan, where he played the son of actor, Sivaji Ganesan. After films such as Singaravelan, Maharasan and Kalaignan; Haasan began to appear in comedies such as Sathi Leelavathi, based on the English film She-Devil, as well as renewing his collobaration with Kasinadhuni Viswanath in his last Telugu language film till date, Subha Sankalpam. In 1996, Haasan starred in the police story, Kuruthipunal. His success in Kuruthipunal, was followed by his third National Film Award for Best Actor in Indian. Playing dual roles of a freedom fighter and his untrustful son, the film also won Haasan regional awards and plaudits for his portrayal.

Haasan appeared as a woman in Avvai Shanmughi inspired by the Hollywood production, Mrs. Doubtfire. In 1997, Haasan began his first directorial venture, the biopic of Mohammed Yusuf Khan, Marudhanayagam which failed to complete its schedules with only half an hour and a trailer being recorded during its shoot. Marudhanayagam had been speculated to be the biggest and most expensive film in Indian cinema with a number of high profile actors technicians signing up for roles. Moreover, the film was launched in a much publicized ceremony by Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom during her visit to India in 1997. Due to budget constraints, the film failed to materialize into feature length but Haasan has sinced stated his interest in building up funds for the project since. Haasan soon made his debut as director with a remake of Avvai Shanmughi in Hindi titled Chachi 420.

2000s: Hey Ram and onwards

Kamal Haasan pictured with Manisha Koirala in Aalavandhan

Following a two-year hiatus in Indian cinema, Haasan opted against reviving his magnum opus, Marudhanayagam, and filmed his second directorial venture, Hey Ram, a period drama told in flashback with a semi-fictional plot centering around India’s Partition and the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi. Haasan also took on roles as the writer, the lyricist and the choreographer as well as producing the film under his home banner. The film, also featured Shahrukh Khan and was India’s submission for the Academy Awards that year. His following film was Aalavandhan, where he portrayed two distinct roles, for one of which he had his head tonsured and gained ten kilograms. Despite much publicity prior to release, the film failed commercially, wih Haasan opting to repay distributors who had suffered losses with the film.

Following a series of successful comedies in Thenali, Panchathantiram and Pammal K. Sambandam and a couple of guest appearances, Haasan directed his third feature film in Virumaandi, a film about the death penalty. Haasan also appeared in Anbe Sivam alongside Madhavan. Priyadarshan, who started the film, departed allowing commercial director Sundar C to complete the film. Anbe Sivam told the story of Nallasivam, enacted by Haasan as an idealist, social activist and communist. Kamal Haasan’s performance was highly lauded by critics with The Hindu stating that Haasan “has once again done Tamil cinema proud”.

Haasan then appeared in the remake film Vasool Raja alongside Sneha. In 2006, Haasan’s long delayed project, Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu emerged as a blockbuster. Gautham Menon’s Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu was Haasan’s first cop film since Kuruthipunal. In 2008, Haasan appeared in K. S. Ravikumar’s Dasavathaaram portraying ten distinct roles in the venture which to-date remians the most expensive Indian film ever made. Pairing opposite Asin Thottumkal, the film became the second highest grossing film ever in Tamil cinema and won Haasan critical praise for his enactment. He had also undertook the opportunity of being the story and screenwriter for the project. Following the completion of Dasavathaaram, Haasan opted to direct his fourth directorial venture, with a film tentatively titled Marmayogi, which after a year of pre-production became stalled. He then opted to produce and star in a venture, Unnaipol Oruvan, co-starring him with Mohanlal. The film, which had Shruti Haasan appear as the music director, became a successful venture for Haasan at the box-office.

Personal life

Family

Kamal Haasan was born on November 7, 1954 to a criminal lawyer named D. Srinivasan and his devout wife Rajalakshmi, both a part of the Tamil Iyengar caste, in the village of Paramakudi in the Ramanathapuram district of Tamil Nadu. Haasan has referred to his parents in recent films, with references being made in Unnaipol Oruvan as well as in the song, Kallai Mattum from Dasavathaaram. Kamal Haasan was the youngest of three brothers, the others being Chaaru Haasan and Chandra Haasan. Chaaru Haasan, like Kamal Haasan, is a National Film Award-winning actor, who appeared in the noted Kannada film, Tabarana Kathe among others, but he has semi-retired from films since of recent times. Kamal’s niece (Chaaru Haasan’s daughter), Suhasini is also a National Film Award Winner and is married to noted director and fellow Award winner, Mani Ratnam, who collaborated with Kamal Haasan in 1987’s Nayagan. Chandra Haasan has appeared as the producer for several of Kamal Haasan’s films as well as being an executive of Kamal Haasan’s home production company, Rajkamal International. His brother’s daughter Anu Haasan has appeared in several films in supporting roles, most notably in Suhasini’s Indira.

Relationships

Despite his much praised and applauded film career, his personal life had some setbacks which have been exploited by the media. In Haasan’s early career, he co-starred in several Tamil and Malayalam films with noted actress Srividya. The pair were reported to have been a part of a notorious affair in the 1970s, with their relationship being explored in the 2008-released Malayalam film, Thirakkatha by Renjith, with Anoop Menon portraying Haasan and Priyamani playing Srividya. Srividya, who died in 2006, was visited by Haasan at her bedside during her final days. In 1978, at the age of twenty four, Haasan met and married danseuse Vani Ganapathy, who was elder to him. Vani put on the mantle of costume designer for her Haasan’s movies and was publicized for walking along with Haasan into the Filmfare Awards South ceremony of 1980, immediately after their wedding. However, the pair split after ten years together, after finding out that Haasan was dating fellow actress, Sarika, with Haasan confirming in a recent interview that he and Vani have never been in touch since.

Subsequently, Haasan and Sarika married in 1988, with the pair having two children: Shruti Haasan (born 1986) and Akshara Haasan (born 1991). The former is a singer as well as an upcoming actress, whilst the latter is pursuing higher studies in Bangalore. Sarika, retired from acting roles soon after her marriage with Haasan, replacing his ex-wife, Vani Ganapathy as Haasan’s costume designer, with acclaimed work in Hey Ram. However, the pair filed for divorced in 2002, with Sarika estranging herself from her children as well as Haasan by the end of the procedure in 2004. Haasan’s intimate relationship with co-star Simran Bagga, who is twenty two years younger, became the reason for the split. A brief relationship with Simran, who appeared opposite Haasan in two consecutive ventures with Pammal K. Sambandam and Panchathantiram, followed after she ended her relationship with choreographer Raju Sundaram. However, the pair’s companionship was short lived, with Simran going onto marry a childhood friend in 2004. Currently Haasan lives with former actress, Gouthami Tadimalla, who co-starred with Haasan in several films in the late 80’s to the early 90’s. Haasan helped her during her traumatic experience suffering from breast cancer and the pair have been in a domestic relationship since 2005. Along with Shruti and Akshara, Gouthami’s daughter, Subbalakshmi, from an annulled marriage also lives with them.

Awards and honours

List of awards and nominations received by Kamal Haasan

National Film Awards

•          1960 — National Film Award for Best Child Artist for Kalathur Kannamma

•          1982 — Best Actor Award for Moondram Pirai

•          1987 — Best Actor Award for Nayagan

•          1996 — Best Actor Award for Indian

Filmfare Awards

Hindi

•          1986 — Best Actor Award for Saagar

•          1998 — Best Story Award for Virasat

Kannada

•          1988 — Best Actor Award for Pushpak

Malayalam

•          1974 — Best Actor Award for Kanyakumari

•          1978 — Best Actor Award for Yaetta

Tamil

•          1975 — Best Actor Award for Apoorva Raagangal

•          1976 — Best Actor Award for Oru Oodhappu Kan Simittugiradhu

•          1977 — Best Actor Award for 16 Vayadhinile

•          1978 — Best Actor Award for Sigappu Rojakal

•          1981 — Best Actor Award for Raja Paarvai

•          1991 — Best Actor Award for Guna

•          1992 — Best Actor Award for Thevar Magan

•          1995 — Best Actor Award for Kuruthipunal

•          1996 — Best Actor Award for Indian

•          2000 — Best Actor Award for Hey Ram

Telugu

•          1981 — Best Actor Award for Aakali Rajyam

•          1983 — Best Actor Award for Sagara Sangamam

•          1989 — Best Actor Award for Indrudu Chandrudu

Tamil Nadu State Film Awards

•          1991 — Special Award for Guna

•          1992 — Best Actor Award for Devar Magan

•          1996 — Best Actor Award for Indian

•          2006 — Best Actor Award for Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu

•          2008 — Best Actor Award for Dasavathaaram

Nandi Awards

•          1983 — Best Actor Award for Saagara Sangamam

•          1986 — Best Actor Award for Swathi Muthyam

•          1989 — Best Actor Award for Indrudu Chandrudu

Puchon International Fantastic Film Festival

•          2004 — Best Film Award for Virumaandi

Vijay Awards

•          2007 – Chevalier Sivaji Ganesan Award for Excellence in Indian Cinema

•          2008 – Best Villain Award for Dasavatharam

•          2008 – Best Comedian Award for Dasavatharam

•          2008 – Best Story-Screenplay Writer Award for Dasavatharam

•          2008 – Most Popular Hero Of The Year Award for Dasavatharam

Special honours

•          1990 — Padma Shri

•          2004 All the awards presented to him were for his artistic talent. He got the first Abraham Kovoor National Award for his Humanist Activities and Secular Life in 2004.

•          2005 — Honorary Doctorate

•          2009 — FICCI Living Legend

•          Kalaimamani

Filmography

As actor, director, writer & producer.

2000s

Year Title Role Co-Stars Language Notes
2010 Untitled.   Music Illayaraja Tamil Pre-Production work in Progress. Rumoured to be the story of Buddha’s tooth
2009 Unnaipol Oruvan Anonymous Caller Mohanlal, Laxmi, Anuja Iyer, Ganesh Venkatraman Tamil Simultaneous release in Telugu as Eenadu, Produced by Kamal Haasan
  Eenadu Anonymous Caller Venkatesh, Anuja Iyer, Ganesh Venkatraman, Laxmi Telugu Produced by Kamal HaasanD.RamanaiduScripted by Kamal Haasan
2008 Dasavathaaram Govindarajan Ramaswamy, George Bush, Christian Fletcher, Balram Naidu, Rangaraja Nambi, Krishnaveni, Kalifullah Khan, Shinghen Narahashi, Avtaar Singh, Vincent Poovaragan Asin Thottumkal, Mallika Sherawat, Jayaprada Tamil Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best ActorWinner, Vijay Award for Best Dialogue WriterWinner, Vijay Award for Favourite HeroWinner, Vijay Award for Best ComedianWinner, Vijay Award for Best VillainNominated, Filmfare Best Tamil Actor Award

Dubbed into Telugu as Dasavathaaram

Dubbed into Hindi as Dashavtar

2006 Vettaiyaadu Vilaiyaadu Raghavan Jyothika Saravanan, Kamalinee Mukherjee Tamil Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best ActorDubbed into Telugu as Raghavan
2005 Rama Shama Bama Shyam Ramesh Arvind, Urvashi, Daisy Bopanna, Shruti Kannada  
  Mumbai Xpress Avinash Manisha Koirala, Vijay Raaz, Om Puri, Ramesh Arvind, Saurabh Shukla Hindi Produced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal Haasan
  Mumbai Express Avinash Manisha Koirala, Pasupathy, Ramesh Arvind, Nasser, Vaiyapuri Tamil Simultaneously made in Telugu as Mumbai XpressProduced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal Haasan
2004 Vasool Raja MBBS Rajaraman Venkatramanan Sneha, Prabhu Ganesan Tamil  
  Virumaandi Virumaandi Abhirami Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as PothurajuProduced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal HaasanDirected by Kamal Haasan
2003 Nala Damayanthi Kamal Haasan Madhavan, Geetu Mohandas Tamil Guest appearanceProduced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal Haasan
  Anbe Sivam Nalla Sivam Kiran Rathod, Madhavan Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as Satyame SivamScripted by Kamal Haasan
2002 Panchathantiram Ramachandra Murthy Simran, Ramya Krishnan, Devayani Tamil Simultaneously made in Telugu as Panchatantram
  Pammal K. Sambandam Pammal Kalyanam Sambandam Simran, Abbas, Sneha Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as Brahmachari
2001 Parthale Paravasam Kamal Haasan Madhavan, Simran, Sneha Tamil Guest appearanceDubbed into Telugu as Paravasam
2000 Aalavandhan Vijay Kumar, Nandhu Kumar Raveena Tandon, Manisha Koirala Tamil Dubbed into Telugu and Hindi as Abhay Scripted by Kamal Haasan
  Thenali Thenali Soman Jyothika, Jayaram, Devayani Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as Tenali
  Hey Ram Saket Ram Shahrukh Khan, Hema Malini, Rani Mukherjee, Vasundhara Das Tamil Winner: Filmfare Best Tamil Actor Award Simultaneously made in Hindi as Hey RamDubbed into Telugu as Hey RamProduced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal HaasanDirected by Kamal Haasan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1990s

Year Title Role Co-Stars Language Notes
1998 Kadhala Kadhala Ramalingham Prabhu Deva, Rambha, Soundarya Tamil Scripted by Kamal HaasanDubbed into Telugu as Navvandi.. Lavvandi!
1998 Chachi 420 Jaiprakash Paswan, Lakshmi Godbhole,Tabu, Ayesha Jhulka Hindi Nominated: Filmfare Best Actor AwardProduced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal HaasanDirected by Kamal Haasan
1996 Avvai Shanmugi Pandiyan, Avvai Shanmugi Meena, Heera Rajgopal Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as Bhamane Satyabhamane
1996 Indian Senapathy Bose, Chandra Bose Manisha Koirala, Urmila Matondkar Tamil Winner: National Film Award for Best ActorWinner: Filmfare Best Tamil Actor AwardWinner: Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best ActorDubbed into Hindi as Hindustani

Dubbed into Telugu as Bharateeyeedu

1995 Kuruthipunal Adhi Narayanan Gouthami Tadimalla, Arjun Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as DrohiProduced by Kamal Haasan
1995 Subha Sankalpam Dasu Priya Raman Telugu Dubbed into Tamil as Paasa Valai
1995 Sathi Leelavathi Shakthivel Heera Rajgopal, Sarala Tamil Produced by Kamal HaasanDubbed into Telugu as Sathi Leelavathi
1994 Nammavar Selvam Gouthami Tadimalla, Srividya Tamil Scripted by Kamal Haasan
1994 Magalir Mattum Kamal Haasan Nassar, Revathi Menon,Rohini, Urvashi Tamil Guest appearanceDubbed into Telugu as Aadavallaku MaathrameDubbed into Malayalam as Ladies OnlyProduced by Kamal Haasan
1994 Mahanadhi Krishnaswamy Suganya Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as MahanadiScripted by Kamal Haasan
1993 Kalaignan Indrajeet Bindiya Tamil

 

1993 Maharasan Maharasan Bhanupriya Tamil Produced by Kamal Haasan
1992 Thevar Magan Shakthivelu Thevar Sivaji Ganesan, Revathi Menon, Gouthami Tadimalla Tamil Winner: Filmfare Best Tamil Actor AwardDubbed into Telugu as Kshatriya PutruduProduced by Kamal HaasanScripted by Kamal Haasan
1992 Singaravelan Velan Kushboo Tamil

 

1991 Guna Guna Rekha, Roshini Tamil

 

1990 Michael Madhana Kamarajan Michael, Madhan, Kameshwaran, Rajan Rupini,Kushboo, Urvashi Tamil Dubbed into Telugu as Michael Madana Kama RajuScripted by Kamal HaasanProduced by Kamal Haasan
1990 Indran Chandran Indiran, Chandran Vijayashanti, Srividya Tamil Scripted by Kamal Haasan Dubbed from Telugu Indrudu Chandrudu
1990 My Dear Marthandan Kamal Haasan Prabhu, Kushboo Tamil Guest appearance

 

 

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