Arulnithi

(Redirected from Arulnithi Tamilarasu)

Arulnithi Tamilarasu (born 21 July 1987) is an Indian actor best known for playing the lead role in Vamsam, which is his debut film directed by Pandiraj.

Arulnithi
Born
Arulnithi Tamilarasu

(1987-07-21) 21 July 1987 (age 36)
Alma materLoyola College, Chennai
OccupationActor
Years active2010–present
Spouse
Keerthana
(m. 2015)
Children2
Parent(s)Tamilarasu (Father)
Mohana (Mother)
Relatives

Personal life

Arulnithi's grandfather is M. Karunanidhi, former Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. His father is M. K. Tamilarasu, brother of M. K. Stalin, Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. His cousins include noted producers, Udhayanidhi Stalin and Dhayanidhi Alagiri.[1]

Arulnithi was educated at St. Michael's Academy in Chennai, before pursuing a degree at Loyola College. He then went on to Pondicherry University to undertake more qualifications.[2] Arulnithi married Keerthana on 7 June 2015.[3] Their first child, a son, was born in 2017,[4] and their second child, a daughter, was born in November 2021.[5]

Acting career

Arulnithi was offered the lead role in Pandiraj's Vamsam after his cousin, Udhayanidhi Stalin, had opted out. The film featured him as a young man shying away from the politics of his village, despite claims for him to avenge his father's death. The film, which featured him alongside Sunaina, was heavily promoted in Tamil Nadu, and became a profitable venture at the box-office, garnering positive reviews. His second film was Udhayan in which he played a dual role for the first time.[6][7] The next film Mouna Guru directed by debutant Santhakumar was critically acclaimed sleeper hit which was also screened at the Hong Kong International Film Festival 2013.[8]

In 2013, he starred in action drama film Thagaraaru was released to average reviews.[9] In 2014, his film Oru Kanniyum Moonu Kalavaanikalum is Chimbu Deven’s trademark style, filled with quirky characters, fantastical elements, and loads of comedy and satire.[10] In 2015, his horror film Demonte Colony, directed by R. Ajay Gnanamuthu,[11] is inspired by real life events centred around a supposedly haunted colony in Chennai called Demonte Colony. The film received mostly positive reviews from critics and became an commercial success at the box office.[12] Thereafter, the comedy Naalu Policeum Nalla Irundha Oorum (2015) which was released to negative reviews.[13] His next film was the crime thriller Aarathu Sinam (2016), which marks the arrival of a remake of yet another brilliant Malayalam film, Jeethu Joseph's Memories that had Prithviraj playing the lead.[14] In Radha Mohan's Brindhavanam (2017), Arulnithi plays a deaf and mute character and his relationship with actor Vivek.[15] Arulnithi's choice of screenplays has always been promising, giving importance to the content, and his next film was Iravukku Aayiram Kangal (2018). Arulnithi fits well into his character and shows maturity with his performance. It was released to positive reviews and performed well at the box office.[16] In 2019, the thriller K-13 is another quality film from Arulnithi who has an eye for good scripts. Arulnithi has once again delivered a subtle performance.[17]

His next movie was the multistarrer drama Kalathil Santhippom (2021) starring with Jiiva. was released to mixed reviews and became an average grosser.[18] In 2022, he starred in thriller films with D Block, Dejavu and Diary. Except for the former film, the latter two films released to positive reviews.[19]

Filmography

YearFilmRoleNotes
2010VamsamAnbarasuNominated, Vijay Award for Best Debut Actor
2011UdhayanVasanth, Udhayan
Mouna GuruKarunakaran
2013ThagaraaruSaravanan
2014Oru Kanniyum Moonu KalavaanikalumThamizh
2015Demonte ColonySrinivasan
Naalu Policeum Nalla Irundha OorumShanmugapandian
2016Aarathu SinamAravind
2017BrindhavanamKannan
2018Iravukku Aayiram KangalBharath
2019K-13Madhiazhagan
2021Kalathil SanthippomAnand
2022D BlockArul
DejavuVikram Kumar
DiaryVaradhan Annadurai
2023Thiruvin KuralThiru
Kazhuvethi MoorkkanMoorkasamy
2024Demonte Colony 2SrinivasanPost-production

References