Tamil Movie List 2008 -

Conversely, Kamal Haasan’s Dasavathaaram was an act of glorious, mad ambition. A film about a bioweapon, a Vaishnava priest, a geologist, a disguised CIA agent, and a 12th-century Samurai—all played by Kamal. It was the year’s most expensive and most ludicrous film. While a box-office success, Dasavathaaram exposed a fracture: spectacle alone, without emotional coherence, could not sustain the new audience. The computer-generated tsunami that washed away the plot’s sins felt symbolic—a warning against drowning storytelling in gimmickry.

The year began and ended with two titans at very different crossroads. Rajinikanth’s Kuselan (2008), a remake of the Malayalam Katha Parayumpol , was a meta-narrative disaster. The film starred the Superstar playing himself—a distant, deified force in a small-town story. Its failure was fascinating. Audiences rejected the very idea of Rajinikanth being peripheral. The film’s melancholic climax, where the hero’s childhood friend watches him from a crowd, accidentally became a prophecy: the superstar was now too big for the village, too abstract for intimacy. 2008 marked the moment the mass hero became a monument, admired but unreachable. tamil movie list 2008

Most importantly, 2008 taught the industry a hard lesson: spectacle without soul fails. The audiences who cheered Rajini’s Chandramukhi (2005) had grown up. They had seen The Dark Knight (released in English that year) and were hungry for psychological complexity. Tamil cinema took that hunger and, over the next decade, gave us Vada Chennai , Super Deluxe , and Jai Bhim . Conversely, Kamal Haasan’s Dasavathaaram was an act of

Anjathe (directed by Mysskin) was a raw, violent, and existential police drama. It stripped the cop hero of his halo. The protagonist, a hot-headed sub-inspector, is not a savior but a broken man whose rigid morality leads to tragedy. The film’s famous intermission—a single, shocking gunshot—redefined heroism in Tamil cinema. Here was a man who failed, who bled, who was morally compromised. Mysskin borrowed from Korean cinema and film noir to tell a deeply local story about caste, friendship, and the corrupting nature of power. Rajinikanth’s Kuselan (2008), a remake of the Malayalam