In A.R. Murugadoss’s SPYDER, SJ Suryah played one of tamil cinema’s creepiest villains — a psychopath who thrived on the cries of those who lost their loved ones. He smiled at pain, relished tears, and fed off human tragedy.

Fast-forward to Karur, 2025. 41 innocent people — including children and women — lost their lives in a stampede at Vijay’s rally. While families wailed and tamil Nadu drowned in grief, the man at the centre of it all released a cinematic video with punch dialogues. No remorse. No genuine sorrow. Just theatrics.


NTK senior Duraimurugan (fondly called “Saatai” Duraimurugan) didn’t mince words. He called out Vijay as nothing less than the real-life SJ Suryah — a man who enjoys the chaos around him while the people pay with their lives.


This isn’t a movie. This is a state mourning real deaths while a so-called leader turns into a psycho showman.


1. The Villain Who Enjoys Tears — Reel to Real

SJ Suryah’s character in SPYDER was fiction. He thrived on human tears. Vijay’s Karur video proved that he enjoys cinematic limelight even while real families cry.


2. 41 Dead, zero Guilt — A Psycho’s Signature

A leader’s first instinct after tragedy should be compassion. Vijay’s first instinct was script-writing. Just like Suryah’s villain, he placed theatrics over empathy.


3. Dialogue Over Humanity — The Curse of a Showman

In Karur, people expected condolences. Instead, they got a cinematic speech with mass dialogue delivery. That’s not leadership. That’s psychopathy.


4. “Saatai” Duraimurugan’s Brutal Truth

By comparing Vijay with SPYDER’s villain, Duraimurugan ripped off the mask. This wasn’t political criticism. It was a psychological diagnosis.


5. Cinematic Addiction > Human Compassion

Vijay seems unable to step out of “actor mode.” Even in the face of mass death, he delivers scenes — not sincerity. That is what makes him dangerous.


6. The Fans Who Clap Like Extras

Just like a villain surrounded by blind followers, Vijay’s fanbase stood by him, hashtagging “We Stand With Vijay” — but never once standing with the dead. The psycho cult was louder than the mourning families.


7. Tamil Nadu Doesn’t Need a Villain-In-Chief

Reel villains are tolerated because they end with defeat. But a real villain masquerading as a leader? That’s a script tamil Nadu cannot afford.


Closing Punch

In cinema, villains like SJ Suryah in SPYDER are celebrated for their performance. In politics, when someone like Vijay acts the same way, it’s not art — it’s a threat.


tamil Nadu just witnessed 41 funerals. The fact that Vijay chose to release a cinematic dialogue video instead of a heartfelt apology shows that the psycho role is no longer reel — it’s real.


And the people of tamil Nadu must decide: do they want a leader, or a villain who smiles at their tears?

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