Trisha portrayed Bhuvana, a college-going Brahmin woman that Aarusamy (Vikram) falls in love with in the film Saamy. While the film, like its sequel, exoticized the Brahmin dialect and culture without going too deeply into caste oppression, the audience loved the chemistry between Bhuvana and Aarusamy. Fans loved Trisha's nick moniker, "Molagapodi." While vikram was the movie's hero, Trisha's performance was also crucial to how well the audience responded to the lead couple's romance.

The film's creators stated that trisha and vikram would return for the sequel. The announcement came as a welcome surprise because male performers frequently act with women who are younger than half their age and because tamil film heroines have a relatively limited shelf life. But Keerthy suresh was also cast in the movie, and trisha eventually dropped out due to "creative differences."


Trisha, who has been working in the business for more than 15 years and is currently starring alone in films, deserved better. As a result of their perception that these performers have no market worth, filmmakers frequently regard heroines as easily replaceable. Male actors are said to be the ones who draw audiences to theatre.

This isn't shocking given how hero-centric our films are. Even though the hero is there in every frame, the movie won't succeed without the help of the other actors. Consider Baahubali 2 as an example. Without anushka Shetty's stirring portrayal of Devasena, Prabhas' Amarendra Baahubali would not have turned out to be the hero he is today. Fans continue to comment on the lead actors' chemistry.




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