No star was safe: When K Rajan challenged Kamal Haasan, Nayanthara, and Yogi Babu
The career of veteran Tamil producer-director K Rajan, who has died at the age of 85, was defined by a rare and aggressive willingness to break Kollywood’s code of silence. While the Tamil film industry is built on a culture of star-worship and public diplomacy, Rajan carved out a distinct identity as its most unfiltered critic, routinely using press conferences to blast A-list actors and directors for bankrupting independent producers.
For decades, Rajan argued that a widening economic divide was destroying Tamil cinema. His crusade was simple: the runaway inflation of actor salaries, combined with a lack of financial accountability, was bleeding small and medium-budget producers dry.
Unlike many industry insiders who spoke in vague riddles to protect their careers, Rajan naming names became a staple of Kollywood media. He regularly targeted the industry's biggest assets, challenging their ethics and financial demands:
- Kamal Haasan & Dhanush: Rajan frequently called out top-tier stars for backing highly experimental, massive-budget projects that overshot financial limits. He publicly cited films like Aayirathil Oruvan (starring Karthi) and Enai Noki Paayum Thota (starring Dhanush) as prime examples of creative indulgence that ultimately left producers buried under inescapable high-interest debt traps.
- Nayanthara: Rajan did not spare the "Lady Superstar" when discussing the industry's remuneration crisis. He publicly criticised her multi-crore salary packages, drawing attention to what he saw as a glaring double standard: demanding top-tier pay while strictly refusing to attend promotional events, audio launches, or press meets to help market the final product.
- Yogi Babu: The comedian also faced Rajan's wrath during a promotional event for Paramapadham Vilayattu. Rajan openly slammed actors like Yogi Babu for skipping media interactions, labelling the behaviour "arrogant" and questioning how stars could happily pocket a producer's capital but claim to be too busy to help sell the movie.
Beyond baseline salaries, Rajan’s criticisms focused heavily on the hidden operational costs of modern film sets. He waged a constant verbal war against the culture of bloated personal entourages.
Rajan routinely exposed how producers were being financially crippled before a single frame was even shot, forced to foot massive daily bills for an actor's personal bodyguards, assistants, stylists, and luxury caravan rentals. To Rajan, this was an ethical failure that placed 100% of the financial risk on the investor, while the talent walked away with zero financial accountability for a film’s box office performance.
Rajan’s aggressive, combative delivery occasionally polarised the industry, with critics labelling his outbursts as performative or overly hostile. However, his tirades resonated deeply with a silent majority of independent producers who lacked the leverage to speak out against the dominant star ecosystem.
By consistently shifting the media's focus from box office glamour to the harsh realities of film finance, Rajan’s career serves as a stark case study in the ongoing, volatile power struggle between Kollywood’s bankable talent and the people who fund them.