In Focus by The Hindu

Is cinema a positive influence in Tamil Nadu politics?

Apr 2, 2026
Srinivasan Ramani, scholar of cinema and politics, and A. S. Pandit Selvan, political analyst steeped in Dravidian history, explore cinema’s role in Tamil Nadu. They discuss star power versus ideology, Vijay’s youth appeal, the Dravidian movement’s cinematic legacy, and risks of depoliticized celebrity politics. The conversation contrasts mass-hero films with progressive cinema and debates limits of film fame in elections.
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INSIGHT

Persistent Third Front Vote Bloc

  • Tamil Nadu has a persistent 'third front' vote bloc that hovers around 15–18% and attracts alternatives to the two Dravidian majors.
  • A. S. Pandit Selvan traced that bloc’s lineage from Congress to Gopalaswamy to Vaiko to Vijayakant, explaining its steady but seat-poor impact.
INSIGHT

Star Heroism Fuels Apolitical Youth Support

  • Vijay's crowds mainly draw young, lightly politicized voters who equate on-screen heroism with real-life leadership.
  • Srinivasan Ramani warned this creates an apolitical, personality-driven base that dilutes Tamil Nadu’s critical political culture.
INSIGHT

Corruption Framing Can Depoliticize Politics

  • Reducing politics to corruption-versus-noncorruption risks depoliticization and a patronizing 'I will protect you' leadership model.
  • A. S. Pandit Selvan contrasted empowerment narratives with messiah-style promises and warned of centralized, non-empowering politics.
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