A few years ago I sold all my stuff to explore the world, creating 12 startups in 12 months and building $1M+/y companies as an indie maker such as Nomad List and Remote OK. I'm also a big pusher of remote work and async and analyze the effects it has on society. Follow me on Twitter or see my list of posts. My first book MAKE is out now. Contact me
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Directed Movies !!install!!: Ks Ravikumar

Ravi was a young assistant director struggling to make a mass-market Tamil film. He had the hero, the villain, and a budget, but his script lacked one thing: commercial confidence . Frustrated, he visited his mentor, an old producer who had seen the rise of many directors.

Ravi watched all night.

By dawn, Ravi had rewritten his script. He added a strong comedic sidekick, gave the villain a relatable motive, and ensured every action scene revealed character, not just stunts. ks ravikumar directed movies

Padayappa had Ramya Krishnan as Neelambari, one of Tamil cinema’s most iconic antagonists. Ravikumar didn’t make her a caricature. She was wealthy, vengeful, and emotionally wounded. Ravi learned: a great villain elevates a mass film. The final confrontation—where Padayappa (Rajinikanth) defeats her without raising a hand—was pure Ravikumar: equal parts emotion, dialogue, and spectacle. Ravi was a young assistant director struggling to

In Muthu , Rajinikanth played a simple servant who was secretly the zamindar’s son. Ravi noticed how Ravikumar didn’t waste time on complex plot mechanics. Instead, every scene—a dance in a disco, a fight with a coconut, a hilarious misunderstanding with the heroine—was designed to make Rajinikanth shine . The film had drama, but it never forgot the audience came for the star’s mannerisms. Ravikumar once said, “The story serves the hero, not the other way around.” Ravi watched all night


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