Susi Ganesan

(Redirected from Susi Ganeshan)

Ganesan Subbiah (born 25 August 1969), popularly known as Susi Ganesan, is an Indian film director, producer, and writer who predominately works in Tamil films apart from a few Hindi remakes of his own films.

Susi Ganesan
Born
Ganesan Subbiah

(1969-08-25) 25 August 1969 (age 55)
Years active2002–present
Spouse
Manjari Susiganesan
(m. 2004)
Parents
  • Subbiah
  • Sittammaal
Websitewww.susiganesan.com

Early life

edit

Ganesan was born on (25 August 1969) Vannivelampatti, Madurai District in Tamil Nadu to Tamil parents Subbiah and Sittamma. He changed his screen name to Susi Ganesan, his first name being from the first two letters from his parents' first names. He attended Gandhi Nikethan higher secondary school in T. Kallupatti and also graduated from Madras Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in automobile engineering.[1]

During his college days, he was a journalist, writing many articles for the Tamil magazine Ananda Vikatan.[1] He was also chairman of ATHENAEUM, the student body of the Madras Institute of Technology, during 1991–92. After working as an assistant to director Mani Ratnam during the filming of Bombay (1995), Iruvar (1997) and Dil Se.. (1998), Ganesan debuted as a director with the 2002 film Virumbugiren.[2]

Career

edit

His first film, Virumbugiren, was initially titled Thithikkum Thee and was to feature Murali in the lead role of a firefighter, but later Prashanth was finalized for the lead role. The project, which also marked the debut of actress Sneha, went through production troubles and released nearly two years after the launch, becoming Ganesan's second release. The film received four awards at the 2001 Tamil Nadu State Film Awards, winning the Best Director, Best Actress and Best Supporting Actress prizes, while also being adjudged as the Best Film of the year.[citation needed]

Ganesan then made Five Star (2002), which happened to be his first release, due to the delay of his first project Virumbugiren. Five Star, produced by his mentor Mani Ratnam under the banner Madras Talkies, featured five newcomers in the title roles. The story focused on friendship, love with social awareness and a touch of human emotions. The film won him the Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Storywriter. He then launched a film titled Sakkarai with Prashanth and Reemma Sen in the lead roles in October 2004, but the film was subsequently postponed then shelved.[3]

In 2006, Ganesan made his third film Thiruttu Payale. The film, which featured Jeevan, Sonia Agarwal and Malavika in principal roles, emerged a sleeper hit and ranked among the highest-grossing Tamil films of the year. It was named the third Best Film of the year by the Tamil Nadu State Government and gave major breaks to the leading actors, with the performances of Jeevan and Malavika, in particular, being considerably appreciated. Then, Ganesan directed Kanthaswamy. The film dealt with the disparity of rich and poor in Indian society, and it was reportedly the first South Indian film in that the protagonist, portrayed by Vikram, conceived a superhero character. The film had the biggest opening in the year 2009.[citation needed]

Ganesan's next directed and produced the Hindi film, Shortcut Romeo (2013), a remake of his 2006 film Thiruttu Payale starring Neil Nitin Mukesh and Puja Gupta.[citation needed]

After a long break from the Tamil film Industry, Susi Ganesan returned with a sequel to his film Thiruttu Payale. Thiruttu Payale 2 featured Bobby Simha, Prasanna and Amala Paul in lead roles. The movie was released in Nov 2017 and made an average collection.[4]

In 2018, Ganesan was accused by filmmaker Leena Manimekalai during the MeToo movement in India.[5] Her accusation was supported by Amala Paul, whom Ganesan had worked with, in Thiruttu Payale 2.[6] In response, Ganesan filed a defamation suit against Manimekalai at the Saidapet Magistrate Court.[7]

Awards

edit
Year Film Award
2002 Five Star Won, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Storywriter
2004 Virumbugiren Won, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film Director & Best Film
2006 Thiruttu Payale Won, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film
2009 Kanthaswamy Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Director

Filmography

edit
Year Film Role Language Notes
2002 Five Star Tamil Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Storywriter
2002 Virumbugiren Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Film
Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Best Director
2006 Thiruttu Payale CID Winner, Tamil Nadu State Film Award for Third Best Film
2009 Kanthaswamy IB IPS Officer credited as Susi Ganeshan
Nominated, Vijay Award for Favourite Director
2013 Shortcut Romeo Detective Agent Hindi credited as Susi Ganesh
Also producer
Remake of Thiruttu Payale
2017 Thiruttu Payale 2 Detective Ganesh Tamil credited as Susi Ganeshan
2024 Ghuspaithiya DIG Ajay Yadav Hindi credited as Susi Ganeshan
Remake of Thiruttu Payale 2[8]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "From Mani Ratnam's assistant to independent filmmaker,Susi Ganesan has come a long way". Rediff. 7 November 2002. Retrieved 1 February 2010.
  2. ^ Ashok Kumar, S.R. (21 June 2006). "From MIT engineer to film director". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 1 July 2006. Retrieved 1 February 2010.
  3. ^ "Malayalam Cinema News | Malayalam Movie Reviews | Malayalam Movie Trailers - IndiaGlitz Malayalam". Archived from the original on 18 July 2012.
  4. ^ "Thiruttuppayale 2 box office collection". 15 December 2017.
  5. ^ Manasa Rao (16 October 2018). "Kollywood's MeToo: Filmmaker Leena Manimekalai speaks out on director Susi Ganesan". The News Minute.
  6. ^ "Amala Paul says Susi Ganesan misbehaved with her too, supports Leena Manimekalai". The News Minute. 24 October 2018.
  7. ^ Sowmya Rajendran (17 June 2019). "Me Too: Director Susi Ganeshan files defamation complaint against Leena Manimekalai". The News Minute.
  8. ^ "Director Susi Ganeshan's next film titled 'Vanjam Theerththayada'". The New Indian Express. 2 January 2022. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
edit
  NODES
Note 2
Project 2