He made his presentation in the 1990 film En Kadhal Kanmani, which was trailed by a progression of little spending Tamil, Malayalam and Telugu films in the 1990s, a large number of which went unnoticed. In any case, the achievement of Bala's catastrophe film Sethu (1999), in which Vikram showed up as a maverick turned darling, began Vikram's effective profession as an on-screen character. In the mid 2000s, Vikram showed up in a progression of masala films, with Dhill (2001), Gemini (2002), Dhool (2003) and Saamy (2003) ending up industrially fruitful endeavors. Amid the period, Vikram likewise showed up in different parts and got basic recognition for his execution as a visually impaired villager in Kasi and a Robin Hood-esque figure in Samurai. In 2003, Vikram's execution as an undertaker with extreme introvertedness range issue in Bala's Pithamagan saw him win the National Film Award for Best Actor, with his character just talking several lines of discourse in the whole film.[1] His appearance as a hopeful legal advisor with numerous identity issue in Shankar's blockbuster Anniyan (2005) likewise won basic praise, as did his appearance as a hero in Kanthaswamy (2009). Vikram's depiction of Veeraiya, a tribal pioneer roused by the Ramayana character Ravana, in Mani Ratnam's Raavanan saw him secure further awards, as did his appearance as a simple-minded grown-up with the development of a six-year-old kid in Deiva Thirumagal (2011). He thusly showed up in different get-ups as a muscle head and a disabled hunchback, losing up to 35 kilograms for groupings, amid the making of Shankar's sentimental spine chiller I (2015) and won rave audits from commentators for his execution. It is as of now the fifth most astounding netting Tamil film of all time.[2][3]
Vikram has advanced different social causes and showed up as the Youth Envoy for the United Nations Human Settlements Program in 2011. He has been a brand diplomat of Sanjeevani Trust and a school for uncommon youngsters, Vidya Sudha, which he remained at amid the making of Deiva Thirumagal and in addition having long haul relationship with the Kasi Eye Care and running his own particular welfare relationship through the Vikram Foundation.[4] In 2016, he created and guided the video to the surge alleviation song of praise, Spirit of Chennai, as a tribute to the city's volunteers following the 2015 South Indian surges

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