All Movie - Vijay

In the final shot, Vijay walks away from the explosions. No backward glance. No victory dance. Just a quiet dissolve into the horizon.

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.”

His early years were the Rasigan (1995) phase – a man of the masses. He danced like no one was watching, fought like everyone was, and wooed heroines with a signature flip of his hair. These were the Kadhalukku Mariyadhai (1997) days, where love was sacred, and the villain was a cardboard cutout of greed. He was the Ghilli (2004) of every family’s prayers – a brave, sporty boy next door who could win a kabaddi match and a girl’s heart in the same breath. vijay all movie

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.

The screen fades to black. A title card appears: In the final shot, Vijay walks away from the explosions

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?”

But stardom has a shadow.

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.”