Imagine an actor earning Rs 50 crore per project. Now imagine those projects consistently underperforming. The management steps in with a proposal: the Rs 50 crore pay remains intact, but only 50% is paid upfront. The remaining 50% becomes performance-linked—dependent entirely on the film’s success. Suddenly, the actor is uneasy. The guaranteed paycheck is no longer fully secure, and ensuring the project’s success now demands involvement at every stage, beyond just acting. This hypothetical scenario mirrors the reality unfolding in Tamil cinema today. After years of discussions around revenue sharing being largely ignored by actors , producers have now decided to take a stand. A token strike has been announced for May 2, with a warning of an indefinite halt if actors refuse to negotiate. What’s driving the conflict? For the past two years, Kollywood producers—much like their counterparts in Tollywood and Bollywood—have been pushing for a revenue-sharing model.…