Balakrishna Tamil Movie List !full! May 2026
That night, Kumar finally watched Simha with Tamil subtitles. When Balakrishna roared, Kumar’s tea glass shattered.
To prove his point, Sundaram decided to create a mythical list: —a fan’s fantasy of what would happen if the "Hindu Hridaya Samrat" conquered Kollywood.
“This doesn’t need a remake,” Sundaram said. “It is already Tamil.” He pointed to the map. “Satakarni ruled Kanchipuram. In my list, the Tamil dubbing is so powerful that school textbooks change.” He imagined Balakrishna, armor shining, screaming at the sea: “Engal veeram engal moochu!” (Our bravery is our breath). He even cast Trisha as the queen. balakrishna tamil movie list
The next morning, Kumar handed Sundaram a note: “Add ‘Legend’ (2022) to the list. Balakrishna plays a hippie who becomes a gangster. In Tamil, it’s called ‘Ketta Payale.’”
Sundaram started his list with a Tamil remake. “Imagine,” he said, drawing on a coffee stain. “Balakrishna as a dual role. One, a gentle philosophy professor in Coimbatore. Two, a rustic warlord in Tirunelveli.” That night, Kumar finally watched Simha with Tamil subtitles
Sundaram’s third entry was personal. He had seen Simha in a grainy VCD with Tamil subtitles. The line still shook him: “Naan evvalavo pera saaptu irukken... aana eppavum simha maamsam saptathu illa!” (I’ve eaten many things… but never lion meat!). He reimagined it with Tamil actor Nassar as the father. The interval block—where Balakrishna arrives on a bullock cart smoking a beedi—became legendary in Sundaram’s head.
“This one,” Sundaram whispered, “is for the B and C centers.” He imagined the film’s Tamil title: Veeramuthu . The plot: A peaceful devotee of Murugan in Palani whose daughter is wronged. In the climax, Balakrishna shaves his head, applies holy ash, and single-handedly annihilates fifty goons using only a vel (spear) while a T. Rajendar-style song plays backwards. “No logic,” Sundaram admitted. “Only mass .” “This doesn’t need a remake,” Sundaram said
Sundaram was a rarity in Mylapore, Chennai. While his friends argued over Rajinikanth’s style and Kamal Haasan’s genius, Sundaram’s bookshelf was a shrine to a Telugu god: Nandamuri Balakrishna.