Bharathiraja: A towering titan who injected raw, rural realism into Tamil cinema
Chennai, Veteran filmmaker, screenwriter, and actor P Bharathiraja, a towering titan of Indian cinema who broke the shackles of studio-bound filmmaking to inject raw, rural realism into Tamil screenplays, died at his residence here early Wednesday morning. Bharathiraja: A towering titan who injected raw, rural realism into Tamil cinema He was 84. The National Award-winning director, affectionately revered as ‘Iyakkunar Imayam’ , had been battling prolonged age-related ailments and recurring respiratory complications for several months. Family associates noted that his physical decline was accelerated by severe emotional trauma following the sudden demise of his son, actor-director Manoj Bharathiraja, in March 2025. Born Chinnasamy on July 17, 1941, in Allinagaram, Theni district, Bharathiraja rose from humble beginnings to alter the trajectory of South Indian cinema permanently. Before his arrival in the late 1970s, Tamil cinema was heavily dominated by indoor studio sets, high-decibel theatrical melodramas, and urban-centric narratives. Bharathiraja shattered this status quo with his explosive directorial debut in 1977, ’16 Vayathinile’. By taking his cameras out of the studio floors and onto the dusty, sun-drenched …






