His 1999 debut, Sethu , changed Tamil cinema forever. It was a simple story: a rowdy college boy (played by a then-unknown Vikram) falls in love, loses his mind due to rejection, and ends up a raving, homeless lunatic. But Bala didn't film the descent into madness with melodrama; he filmed it with clinical, horrifying realism.
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In the pantheon of Indian cinema, there are directors who make you laugh, directors who make you think, and directors who make you feel. And then there is . The Tamil filmmaker doesn't just make you feel; he eviscerates you. He holds a magnifying glass to the raw, festering wounds of society—caste violence, mental illness, disability, and sexual trauma—and refuses to look away. film director bala