In the pantheon of Indian cinema, heroes are worshipped and villains are despised. But every once in a while, an actor arrives who doesn't just play a role—he occupies a space in your memory. Prakash Raj is that actor.
In the last decade, he has pivoted to playing the weary, loving, often vulnerable father. Think (2019), where he plays a strict, lower-caste mridangam maestro who grapples with legacy and ego. Or Ratsasan (2018)—here, he is a timid, retired principal and a doting father whose tragedy drives the film’s emotional core. You go from fearing his rage to crying at his grief. prakashraj movies
But unlike the stereotypical "moustache-twirling" villain, Prakash Raj brought logic to evil. You understood why he was angry. You hated him because he made sense. No discussion of his craft is complete without the magnum opus: Iruvar (1997) and, more popularly, the Kannada political drama Sarkar (2005) or the epic Mogul ? Wait, let’s be specific. In the pantheon of Indian cinema, heroes are