Yes. This 2009-11 phase is much worse than the 1999-2K phase.
Poove Unakkaga - Vijay's talent get's noticed
Kadalukku Mariyadhai - The boy-next-door becomes an household name
Ghilli - Establishing Vijay as the Undisputed King of Commercial Cinema
Pokkiri - Redefines Vijay's mass and reach among all audiences
Thuppakki - Re-establishes Vijay's top position in today's highly competitive industry
Yes. This 2009-11 phase is much worse than the 1999-2K phase.
I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it.
- Bernard Shaw
Vettaikaran was a hit in 2009 December, it had one of the biggest openings for that year.
2011 Jan 15 - Kavalan released after a lot of troubles and became a moderate success which ran for 100 days despite the competition from Aadukalam & Siruthai and less screens and saved Vijay&career to an extent. After the release Sify released an article stating 'Vijay's popularity has increased'.
2011 April - Vijay and fans supported ADMK and they won election making Vijay safe( at the time) and I remember Velayudham trailer was shown on JeyaTV for the whole day while the election results were being announced at the same time.
2011 Diwali - Velayudham released in less screens than 7am Arivu and became a super hit, running for 100 days beating 7am Arivu and was a big comeback for Vijay by beating Surya as he was at the top in business during that period(due to the combination of ARM after Gajini and had backup from RedGiant Udhayanidhi Stalin). Velayudham was an unexpected hit!
NOTE: Ajith made a strong comeback during this year mid with the blockbuster Mangaatha, making Vijay&Ajith the next generation super stars pushing Surya down.
To be frank Velayudham was a bigger hit than Nanban due to the budget difference. The only thing Nanban did to Vijay is earned him a good name as an actor but failed to beat box office records. Thuppakki was the one after Gilli/Pokkiri which made him a super star of this generation!
Vijay made a comeback with Kaavalan, a movie which every Vijay fan will not forget as there was a Red Card issued on Vijay by Paneerselvam(producer Council leader, a video by him on Vijay/Ajith were shared by media all over)after a disaster Sura and was unable to release it on time(Jan14th) due to huge financial issues & people's support for Vijay increased during/after the movie.
Last edited by Chathriyan; 20th November 2014 at 03:38 PM.
Good analysis, the reason why I included 2011 as bad phase in spite of the movies' success as you had mentioned is the fact that you had mentioned in your post itself. From being the ruler of box office his movies were relegated to second position. He reclaimed it from and after nanban
I am not into the BO discussion right now. But purely from a fan's perspective, 2 films released in this period are the mistakes i never want Vijay to commit again in his career - Villu and Suraa. Both got the result they deserved.
Unfortunately Vettaikkaran, a much better watch and a profitable venture was clubbed with these two films by you know who and was projected as a flop.
I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it.
- Bernard Shaw
True. But sad that it will go down the history as his 50th film.
I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it.
- Bernard Shaw
Completely agree with Ajay.
It was Vijay's worst phase, worser than the Shahjahan-Pudhiya Geethai phase or the Endrenrum Kadhal-Kannukul Nilavu phase.
Vijay's credit for Kushi as a life changer was I guess due to all the rumors surrounding his marriage and the wife-luck factor, apart from the lean-patch in movies.
Chatriyan, very good analysis, but this is one period where Box Office and Money took a backseat, as Ajay has put it. This was all about respect, which Vijay was losing. He became an easy target for the 'you know who' group and he was deemed one-dimensional, over-the-top and a spent force. Make no mistake, even movies like ATM, Villu and Sura made more money than some of the hits of his competitors, but as rsubras quite rightly puts, he was no longer the leader. Surya, was making all the right moves, working with the best directors and was looking dependable. Vettaikaran was a hit, bigger than the hits of others, but because it was Vijay and because it was right in between Vijay's worst, it was conveniently included in the flop category. In Hindsight, this is the best thing to have happened to Vijay. He understood, it was not only about BO that matters, it was about characters, directors, technicians, movies and respect.
After Sura, Vijay has delivered two 100 crore blockbusters, has worked with Industry's best such as Shankar and ARM and is making smart choices expanding his commercial horizon with movies such as Vijay58. I am sure, there is more to come!
He is back to what he is best at, setting the box office on fire.
Last edited by CEDYBLUE; 20th November 2014 at 07:17 PM.
In admiration of Mr. Evergreen Young, Mr. Box Office, Mr. Dance, Mr. MASS - | Ilayathalapathy VIJAY |
I guess Vijay was having a doubt of which way to chose. Whether to chose the mass entertainer way or to woo the family audience. His Tirupachi and Sivakasi were BBs and a romantic film like Sachien was not a great money spinner like these films. Even a boring Madura became a hit because of his previous film. Pokkiri was a BB too and that made him believe that mass entertainers are the safe bet. Kuruvi started the downfall and then Villu, Suraa followed. He learnt his lessons the hard way and realized that its not about mass entertainers or family films but the making is all that matters.
After Suraa, I guess only Thalaivaa didn't do well in the BO. Not because of a bad content but due to lot of external factors.
I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it.
- Bernard Shaw
This is Sify's year end report of 2009 which speaks about VK's BO verdict.
http://www.sify.com/mobile/movies/20...frfMiibaa.html
I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it.
- Bernard Shaw
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