Visu
Meenakshisundaram Ramasamy Viswanathan (1 July 1945 – 22 March 2020), professionally known as Visu, was an Indian screenwriter, film director, actor, stage performer, and television talk show host renowned for his contributions to Tamil cinema, particularly through family dramas that highlighted moral and social values in middle-class households.[1][2] Beginning his career writing scripts for stage plays and assisting director K. Balachander on films, Visu transitioned to directing with his debut Kanmani Poonga and helmed numerous productions in the 1980s and 1990s, including Manal Kayiru, Chidambara Rahasiyam, and Penmani Aval Kanmani, many of which achieved commercial success by blending humor, ethical dilemmas, and realistic portrayals of familial relationships.[3][4] His 1986 film Samsaram Athu Minsaram marked a pinnacle, earning the National Film Award for Best Feature Film as the first Tamil production to receive a gold medal in that category, praised for its insightful depiction of generational conflicts and reconciliation.[5][6] Visu's work extended to television hosting and occasional acting roles, cementing his legacy as a storyteller who prioritized didactic narratives over spectacle in an industry often dominated by commercial formulas.[7][2]Early life
Family background and education
Meenakshisundaram Ramasamy Viswanathan, known professionally as Visu, was born on July 1, 1945, in Kalakkad, a town in Tamil Nadu's Tirunelveli district. He grew up in a traditional, close-knit middle-class Tamil family as the eldest son among brothers Rajamani, Kishmu, and Kuriakose Ranga, where emphasis was placed on familial solidarity, discipline, and adherence to cultural norms rooted in Hindu Tamil heritage.[8][9][5] This family structure, typical of joint households in rural and semi-urban Tamil Nadu during the mid-20th century, fostered values of mutual support and moral rectitude that later informed Visu's depictions of everyday social dynamics. The supportive sibling relationships provided a stable foundation, contrasting with the individualistic trends emerging in urban India post-independence.[5] Visu's formal education occurred during his school years, where he first engaged with performing arts through stage acting, honing observational skills of human behavior without documented pursuit of higher academic qualifications in arts or cinema. His self-directed learning from societal interactions and traditional family life supplemented this basic schooling, shaping a pragmatic understanding of causal relationships in interpersonal and cultural contexts.[2]Professional beginnings
Theatre involvement
Visu commenced his involvement in theatre during the 1960s as a member of Y. G. Parthasarathy's United Amateur Artistes (UAA) troupe, contributing initially as an actor and scriptwriter for stage productions.[2][10] His scripts, such as Uravukku Kai Kodupathillai, examined relational bonds and ethical conflicts within social contexts, laying groundwork for narrative techniques emphasizing moral introspection.[5] Through performances and writing in UAA, Visu honed a style reliant on verbose dialogues and character-centric plots that mirrored real-life familial tensions and societal norms, favoring understated realism in staging over elaborate visual effects.[5] This phase, spanning key years from approximately 1967 to 1973, predated his transition to cinema and cultivated his proficiency in depicting everyday ethical dilemmas through accessible, conversation-driven storytelling.[11] Later, he established his own troupe, Viswasanthi, extending his theatrical practice independently.[10]Entry into cinema as assistant director
Visu transitioned from his involvement in Tamil theatre to the film industry by serving as an assistant director to the established filmmaker K. Balachander beginning in the early 1970s.[12] This entry point exposed him to the operational demands of cinema production, where Balachander's projects typically centered on middle-class family dynamics and social critiques rather than high-octane commercial formulas.[1] In this capacity, Visu acquired foundational knowledge of screenplay construction and performer guidance, leveraging his prior stage expertise to navigate the faster tempo and visual constraints of film compared to live theatre. Balachander's mentorship emphasized crafting dialogues that illuminated everyday ethical dilemmas, such as familial discord and societal pressures like dowry demands, fostering Visu's commitment to narratives grounded in moral realism over escapist spectacle.[1][12] These formative collaborations sharpened Visu's technique for weaving subtle humor into didactic elements, drawing from Balachander's balanced approach to entertaining while instructing audiences on relational and ethical conduct—a method rooted in observable human behaviors rather than contrived drama. This hands-on apprenticeship, spanning into the late 1970s, equipped him with the technical proficiency needed to pursue independent direction while prioritizing content that reflected verifiable social patterns.[1][12]Directorial career
Debut and early films
Visu's directorial debut, Manal Kayiru (1982), centered on a young man's eight rigid conditions for an ideal bride, which his uncle circumvents by arranging a marriage to a woman meeting none of them, resulting in comedic family reconciliations and reflections on marital compatibility.[13] The film marked his transition from assistant director and playwright to helm, testing audience appetite for light-hearted explorations of traditional marriage norms amid everyday household tensions.[13] It achieved commercial success as a laugh riot, drawing crowds with its emphasis on familial problem-solving over sensationalism.[13] In the same year, Kanmani Poonga (1982) delved into infertility strains within a newlywed couple, where the husband's mother pressures for a second marriage, incorporating subtle comedy to underscore joint family obligations and ethical dilemmas around progeny and loyalty.[14] Released on November 14, this follow-up refined Visu's approach by amplifying interpersonal dialogues to bridge generational divides, prioritizing resolutions rooted in mutual understanding rather than external interventions.[14] Audience response validated the focus on conservative family ethics, as the narrative's moral underpinnings resonated without relying on prevailing cinematic trends like urban individualism. By Rajathanthiram (1984), Visu escalated experimentation with extended family intrigue, featuring protagonists scheming to oust a perceived disruptive stepmother through palace-like household machinations, thereby highlighting conflicts in unified living systems and the virtues of reconciliation.[15] Starring Karthik and Sulakshana, the film maintained a blend of drama and levity to probe loyalty and deception within kin networks, adjusting pacing based on prior hits' feedback to sustain viewer engagement with didactic yet entertaining portrayals of traditional hierarchies.[15] Early box-office indicators affirmed this trajectory, as theaters reported steady occupancy from family viewership seeking affirming depictions of ethical interpersonal navigation.[16]Major works and commercial success
Visu's breakthrough as a director came with Samsaram Adhu Minsaram (1986), a family drama exploring tensions arising from a wife's career ambitions clashing with traditional household roles, ultimately resolved through familial dialogue and compromise rather than external interventions.[17] The film achieved significant commercial viability, running successfully in theaters and earning acclaim for its grounded portrayal of middle-class struggles, which resonated with audiences valuing collective family stability over individual pursuits.[18] It received the National Film Award for Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment in 1987, marking the first such honor for a Tamil film and underscoring its cultural impact in promoting resilient family dynamics amid modern pressures.[19] Subsequent successes included Thirumathi Oru Vegumathi (1987), which depicted a woman's sacrifices for her siblings' education and the ensuing family frictions, emphasizing restitution through intra-family accountability and ethical reckoning rather than legal or individualistic remedies.[20] The film performed strongly at the box office, contributing to Visu's reputation for crafting narratives that prioritized causal resolutions rooted in kinship obligations, appealing to viewers in an era of shifting social norms. Its Telugu remake, Srimathi Oka Bahumathi, further evidenced the story's broad commercial appeal by achieving over 100-day runs in multiple centers. Similarly, Manal Kayiru (1988) grossed well despite initial critique of its dialogue length, succeeding commercially by highlighting paternal guidance and sibling reconciliation in a middle-class context, reinforcing themes of perseverance through traditional moral frameworks.[21] These films collectively garnered state-level recognition, including Tamil Nadu honors tied to their box-office performance and relevance in addressing everyday familial endurance, with Visu's approach yielding consistent profitability—estimated at over 70% of his output from this period—by aligning content with audience preferences for realistic depictions of cohesion over fragmentation.[22] The awards, such as Filmfare South nods, validated the works' empirical success in capturing verifiable societal tensions while advocating for resolutions grounded in empirical family interdependence.[19]Later directorial efforts
In the 1990s, Visu continued directing films centered on familial relationships and ethical dilemmas, such as Varavu Nalla Uravu (1990), which explored wealth's impact on family bonds, and Neenga Nalla Irukkanum (1992), emphasizing personal integrity amid social pressures. These works adhered to his established style of didactic narratives promoting traditional values, even as Tamil cinema increasingly favored high-octane action films featuring mass heroes, which drew larger audiences and dominated box-office earnings during the decade.[22] Subsequent directorial projects became sporadic, including Pattukottai Periyappa (1994), Vaanga Partner Vaanga (1995), and Meendum Savithri (1996), reflecting persistent thematic consistency but yielding limited commercial traction amid evolving viewer preferences for spectacle over moral introspection. His final film as director, Sigamani Ramamani (2001), starred S. V. Shekhar and Urvashi in a comedy-drama underscoring marital harmony and humility, marking the culmination of his cinematic output after roughly 25 features overall.[23] Facing reduced viability in feature films due to market dynamics prioritizing action and entertainment over value-oriented stories, Visu pivoted to television in later years, hosting interactive debate programs like Arattai Arangam on Sun TV and Visuvin Makkal Arangam on Jaya TV, where he leveraged stage-derived techniques—such as direct audience engagement and rhetorical discourse—to propagate ethical insights and family-centric advice to a wider demographic via the small screen.[24] This medium enabled sustained relevance without compromising his foundational principles of moral realism, allowing broader dissemination of conservative social commentary despite cinematic headwinds.[22]Other creative roles
Acting contributions
Visu made his acting debut in the 1981 Tamil film Kudumbam Oru Kadambam, directed by S. P. Muthuraman, in which he portrayed a key family patriarch navigating middle-class domestic tensions, a role that echoed the moral and relational dynamics central to his screenplays.[12][25] This appearance marked his transition from behind-the-camera work to on-screen presence, where he embodied authoritative figures dispensing practical life advice, thereby extending his directorial emphasis on familial harmony and ethical decision-making into performative authenticity.[26] In subsequent roles, particularly within his own directorial projects, Visu continued to select characters that reinforced narrative themes of wisdom and realism, such as Beemarao, a pragmatic investigator in the 1985 comedy-thriller Chidambara Rahasiyam, where his understated delivery highlighted problem-solving through commonsense rather than melodrama.[27][28] He appeared in over 30 films across four decades, often in supporting capacities like marriage brokers or elders in titles including Uzhaippali (1993) and Pattukottai Periyappa (1994), prioritizing roles that aligned with his worldview of joint family resilience over prolific output.[29] These performances, delivered with a deliberate restraint, avoided typecasting pitfalls by focusing on moral exemplars, thus complementing rather than overshadowing his primary creative pursuits.[30] Visu's acting choices reflected a strategic selectivity, limiting screen time to instances where his presence could authentically underscore scripted ideals of causality in human relationships, as seen in his cameos in films like Irattai Roja (1996), ensuring his portrayals served as narrative anchors without diluting his directorial authority.[31] This approach yielded impactful, memorable contributions that prioritized depth—such as conveying paternal guidance through subtle gestures—over volume, maintaining consistency with his broader oeuvre's commitment to grounded, evidence-based depictions of social realities.[32]Writing for stage and screen
Visu began his writing career in theatre, authoring scripts that dissected social dynamics through ensemble narratives emphasizing causal chains in everyday dilemmas. His plays often portrayed interconnected family units grappling with employment instability, marital discord, and moral quandaries, presenting empirical scenarios from diverse character viewpoints to underscore how individual choices ripple into communal outcomes. For instance, in "Tirumbuthe Vanakkam," he explored unemployment's multifaceted effects, illustrating how job loss disrupts household stability and ethical decision-making across generations.[33] Through his troupe Viswasanthi, founded in the late 1970s, Visu staged multiple successful productions that adapted these themes for live audiences, fostering discussions on preserving relational hierarchies amid socioeconomic pressures. One early work, "Easwara Allah Tere Nam" (mid-1970s), examined interfaith ethics and familial loyalty, drawing on real-world tensions to argue for pragmatic resolutions rooted in mutual dependence rather than ideological absolutism. These stage efforts, performed over decades, influenced Tamil theatre by prioritizing dialogue-driven causality over spectacle, with Visu contributing to at least ten such plays.[5][34] Transitioning to screenwriting, Visu penned dialogues and scripts for numerous Tamil films, infusing them with incisive commentary on how urbanization and individualism erode traditional family structures. In contributions to comedies like Thillu Mullu (1981), his lines satirized workplace hypocrisies while reinforcing ethical accountability within domestic spheres. Similarly, for Netrikkan (1986) and Keezh Vanthu Vannu (1985), he crafted narratives critiquing marital infidelity and generational conflicts, using character interactions to demonstrate causal links between personal lapses and familial disintegration. These screenplays, extending to over 30 credited works, often featured patriarchal anchors as stabilizers against modern entropy, extending his stage-derived focus on empirical social realism.[35][18]Artistic style and themes
Core elements in films and plays
Visu's films and plays recurrently centered on the joint family structure, depicting multi-generational households unified under patriarchal guidance as embodiments of enduring stability. These portrayals mirrored the social fabric of Tamil middle-class communities in the 1980s and 1990s, where joint living arrangements facilitated resource pooling and intergenerational support amid economic constraints.[18] Parental authority served as the pivotal force, enforcing norms that prioritized familial cohesion over personal whims, with disruptions arising from deviations often traced to lapses in deference or duty.[18] Resolution of intra-family tensions invariably hinged on protracted dialogues that dissected causes and reinstated hierarchical order, eschewing dramatic contrivances in favor of reasoned reconciliation rooted in reciprocal obligations.[18] This approach underscored causal realism, wherein individual moral failings—such as neglect of elders or marital discord—precipitated tangible disruptions, resolvable only through acknowledgment of collective interdependence rather than isolated self-correction.[18] Humor permeated these narratives not as mere levity but as a tool to expose the absurd outcomes of ethical shortcuts, blending situational comedy with illustrative consequences to reinforce adherence to proven familial protocols without resorting to maudlin appeals.[18] In distinction from peers gravitating toward urban tales of solitary ambition and nuclear setups, Visu's oeuvre upheld joint familial duty as the antidote to modern fragmentation, privileging empirical communal resilience over narratives of unchecked individualism.[18]Influences and innovations
Visu was profoundly shaped by K. Balachander, serving as his assistant director and screenwriter from 1967 to 1981, during which he contributed to films emphasizing social realism, nuanced interpersonal conflicts, and progressive themes on class and relationships.[22][35] This apprenticeship honed Visu's approach to character-driven narratives, evident in his adoption of Balachander's focus on realistic dialogue and ensemble interactions, but adapted to prioritize causal chains of family decisions over broader societal critiques.[8] From his early career scripting Tamil stage plays, Visu innovated by integrating theatre techniques into cinema, employing large ensemble casts to depict interconnected family dynamics and moral causality, where individual actions ripple through joint household structures.[36] This differed from Balachander's often individualistic protagonists by emphasizing collective resolutions grounded in traditional values, fostering deeper explorations of relational interdependence.[18] Visu pioneered low-budget family satires in Tamil cinema during the 1980s and 1990s, shifting from high-drama spectacles to instructional moral tales that targeted middle-class audiences with relatable depictions of joint families, often featuring a patriarchal figure navigating generational tensions.[18][37] Films like Samsaram Adhu Minsaaram (1986) exemplified this by using satire to convey ethical lessons on harmony and duty, achieving sustained appeal through quotable, proverb-laden dialogues that encouraged family discussions rather than escapist entertainment.[35] His formula prioritized empirical family realism—drawing from observed middle-class life—over stylized action, proving commercially viable with multiple hits produced on modest budgets.[22]Political engagement
Affiliation with BJP
Visu joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on January 30, 2016, at the party's Chennai office, in the presence of Union Minister of State for Road Transport, Highways, and Shipping Pon Radhakrishnan.[38] This marked his formal political alignment at age 70, following the BJP's national victory in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.[39] In explaining his decision, Visu emphasized his belief in nationalism and spirituality as core values he identified within the BJP, stating, "I want to do my best for the people and feel politics is the best way to do it. I believe in nationalism and spirituality and I found it in BJP. Hence I chose to join the party."[40] He cited admiration for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership as capable of effecting necessary national change, aligning his late-career entry into politics with a commitment to these principles amid perceived shifts in governance post-2014.[41] This affiliation represented a departure from his earlier brief association with the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK), which he joined on April 26, 2006, and left following J. Jayalalithaa's death in December 2016.[38][41] Visu's support for BJP extended to active campaigning during the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, where he pledged to promote the party's broader ideology rather than specific candidates, underscoring a focus on national integrity over regional populism.[41]Campaigning and public statements
Visu participated in campaigning for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) during the 2019 Lok Sabha elections in Tamil Nadu, announcing his intention to support the party's candidates in constituencies allied with the AIADMK, excluding that of state president Tamilisai Soundararajan.[41] He cited his inability to meet Soundararajan despite three years as a party member since January 2016, questioning how he could effectively endorse her under such circumstances.[42] This followed his departure from the AIADMK after J. Jayalalithaa's death in December 2016. In public statements tied to his campaigning, Visu expressed support for the BJP's vision of national advancement, crediting Prime Minister Narendra Modi's leadership for transformative potential and likening Union Minister Pon. Radhakrishnan to the revered former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister K. Kamaraj for administrative integrity.[42] He invoked the principle that "Dharma will prevail," framing his political engagement as aligned with spiritual and nationalist values rather than personal alliances.[42] Leveraging his experience as a playwright and director of family-centric narratives, Visu delivered speeches in a performative style that echoed theatrical dialogues, aiming to connect with audiences on moral and societal continuity. Supporters praised this approach for its sincerity, viewing it as an extension of his cinematic advocacy for traditional family structures amid modern challenges. Critics, however, often labeled his interventions as outdated, associating them with conservative themes from his films that clashed with progressive policy discourses in Tamil Nadu.[41]Personal life and death
Family and relationships
Visu married Sundari (also known as Uma), a homemaker, in 1975, and their union lasted until his death in 2020.[43][44] The couple had three daughters—Lavanya, Sangeetha, and Kalpana—and six grandchildren at the time of his passing.[2][44] Visu's personal relationships emphasized traditional family roles and stability, mirroring the domestic harmony he depicted in his screenplays and films, which often explored marital fidelity, parental duties, and intergenerational ties without sensationalism.[2] He maintained a low public profile regarding his household, avoiding media exposure of private matters and evading any documented controversies or deviations from conventional partnerships.[44] This reticence extended to his daughters, who led private lives uninvolved in the entertainment industry.Health decline and passing
In the years leading up to his death, Visu suffered from prolonged kidney-related ailments that had persisted for over a decade, compounded by other age-related health complications such as renal dysfunction.[45][46] He received ongoing medical treatment for these conditions, which progressively deteriorated his health.[44] Visu died on March 22, 2020, at a private hospital in Chennai from kidney failure, at the age of 74; his daughter Lavanya stated that he had suffered a cardiac arrest earlier that day around 5:30 p.m.[47][2][1] His funeral and cremation took place the following day, March 23, 2020, in Chennai, with family members present.[2] The event drew expressions of grief from Tamil film industry peers, including actors and directors who acknowledged his contributions through public statements.[48][44]Legacy and reception
Achievements and impact
Visu directed approximately 25 feature films between 1981 and 1993, many of which centered on middle-class family dynamics and ethical dilemmas, achieving commercial viability with reports indicating that around 70% of his directorial output generated profits despite modest budgets.[22][1] His 1986 film Samsaram Adhu Minsaram earned the National Film Award for Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment, marking the first Tamil film to receive this Golden Lotus honor and underscoring recognition for content reinforcing familial bonds and moral integrity.[5][49] In 1992, Neenga Nalla Irukkanum secured the National Film Award for Best Film on Other Social Issues, highlighting Visu's ability to address societal concerns through relatable narratives.[49] Additionally, Dowry Kalyanam (1983) garnered the Tamil Nadu State Film Award, affirming state-level acclaim for his directorial approach.[50] These works contributed to the popularization of the family drama genre in Tamil cinema during the 1980s and 1990s, where Visu established a template for joint-family portrayals emphasizing patriarchal guidance, interpersonal conflicts resolved through dialogue, and conservative ethical frameworks, influencing subsequent filmmakers in crafting audience-resonant stories over spectacle-driven plots.[18][35] His films' enduring appeal is evidenced by frequent television reruns on Tamil channels, sustaining viewership among generations and embedding themes of familial duty and realism into popular culture, as reflected in retrospective analyses praising their role in countering escapist trends with grounded, value-oriented content.[22] Visu's multifaceted output, including original plays and novels adapted into scripts, helped preserve Tamil dramatic traditions by integrating stage-like dialogue and moral didacticism into cinema, fostering a niche for ethical realism that resonated in conservative Tamil audiences and earned posthumous tributes for upholding cultural continuity amid evolving media landscapes.[5][51] This impact extended to shaping viewer perceptions of social roles, with box-office metrics and award validations demonstrating tangible influence on Tamil media's family-centric output rather than transient commercial fads.[1]Criticisms and debates
Critics from progressive circles have accused Visu's films of reinforcing patriarchal norms by depicting women primarily in supportive roles within joint family structures, often prioritizing collective harmony over individual agency. For instance, portrayals in movies like Samsaram Adhu Minsaram (1986) emphasize filial obedience and spousal deference, which some argue perpetuates traditional gender hierarchies amid evolving social norms.[37] [33] Additionally, detractors have pointed to the formulaic quality of his plots, which recurrently revolve around domestic conflicts resolved through moral reconciliation, potentially sidelining narratives of modern individualism and urban aspirations. This repetition, evident across films such as Pudhu Pudhu Arthangal (1989) and later works, has been described as leading to diminishing returns in audience engagement by the 1990s.[51] Debates have arisen regarding the relevance of Visu's conservative family-centric cinema following India's economic liberalization in 1991, which spurred shifts toward globalized, youth-oriented storytelling in Tamil films. While some contend his emphasis on traditional values clashed with emerging individualism, data on persistent popularity—such as frequent social media revivals of clips from Sigamani Ramamani (2003) and positive retrospective discussions—demonstrate sustained appeal in rural and conservative demographics, where joint family systems remain prevalent.[52][53] Visu's integration of explicit moral messaging has sparked discussions on whether it veered into didacticism, with proponents of critique viewing it as overly prescriptive, yet defenders highlight its alignment with causal social instruction rooted in empirical observations of family stability outcomes in Indian contexts. Absent major personal or professional scandals tied to his oeuvre, these debates center on interpretive tensions between cultural preservation and adaptation.[54]Filmography
As director
Visu's directorial works predominantly featured family dramas that emphasized ethical dilemmas, familial bonds, and social norms within middle-class Tamil households. These films often incorporated didactic elements to promote traditional values and resolve conflicts through dialogue and moral introspection. His directorial debut was the comedy-drama Manal Kayiru (1982).[55] He followed with Dowry Kalyanam (1983), a social family drama critiquing dowry practices.[29] In 1985, Puthiya Sagaptham starred Vijayakanth in a narrative centered on familial redemption.[56] The 1986 release Samsaram Adhu Minsaram earned the National Film Award for Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment at the 35th National Film Awards.[19] [6] Subsequent films included Chidambara Rahasiyam (1986), another blend of family and comedic elements; Kavalan Avan Kovalan (1987); Sakalakala Sammandi (1989); Varavu Nalla Uravu (1990); Neenga Nalla Irukkanum (1992); Pattukottai Periyappa (1994); Vaanga Partner Vaanga (1995); Meendum Savithri (1996); and his final directorial effort, Sigamani Ramamani (2001).[29] [57] These later works continued the pattern of ensemble-driven stories resolving interpersonal tensions through reconciliation.As writer (films)
Visu's screenwriting for films extended beyond those he directed, including contributions to projects helmed by other directors, particularly during his tenure as assistant to K. Balachander. These efforts often involved crafting screenplays, stories, and dialogues that emphasized family dynamics, moral dilemmas, and middle-class values, themes recurrent in his broader oeuvre. His standalone writing credits demonstrate an ability to adapt narrative structures for collaborative productions, with several drawing from original concepts rather than adaptations.[12] Key examples include:- Ennadi Meenakshi (1977): story, an original narrative contribution to the film directed by D. Yoganand.[32]
- Pattina Pravesam (1977): screenplay, supporting the direction of K. Balachander in this exploration of social contrasts.[12]
- Varumayin Niram Sivappu (1980): screenplay, providing the foundational script for Balachander's direction, focusing on youthful aspirations and societal pressures.[32]
- Avan Aval Adhu (1980): screenplay, co-developed for Balachander's anthology-style film addressing interpersonal relationships.[12]
- Kudumbam Oru Kadambam (1981): screenplay, an original work directed by S. P. Muthuraman, centering on familial unity and discord, for which Visu also acted in a supporting role.[32][58]
- Thillu Mullu (1981): dialogues, enhancing the comedic elements in Balachander's remake of the Malayalam film Bobanum Moliyum, starring Rajinikanth.[32][12]
- Nallavanuku Nallavan (1984): screenplay, underpinning Balachander's direction in this story of revenge and redemption.[58]
- Netrikkan (1986): screenplay, contributing to Balachander's thriller involving psychological intrigue.[58]