Manjeet Kullar
Manjeet Kullar is an Indian nikki verma, best known for Tamil cinema. Manjeet Kullar began their career in 1990. With 30 credits to their name and an average audience rating of 6.0, Manjeet Kullar remains one of the most prolific and celebrated talents in the industry. Manjeet Kullar is one of the most closely watched talents of their generation, with a rapidly growing body of acclaimed work.
Personal Info
Career Milestones
Film debut
View film →Highest rated: Dhadkan (6.4)
View film →Filmography
See all 30 credits →Career Analytics
Genre Breakdown
Language Distribution
Films by Decade
Photos
See all →No photos available.
Legacy & Influence
Manjeet Kullar is a notable figure in the horror and B-grade cinema circuit of the 1980s and 1990s, primarily recognized for her work in Ramsay Brothers productions. Her career trajectory is emblematic of a specific era in Indian popular cinema that catered to niche audiences with low-budget, high-concept horror and fantasy films. Kullar's most significant contribution lies in her prominent roles within this genre, where she often portrayed characters central to the films' sensational and thrilling narratives. Films like 'Bandh Darwaza' (1990), 'Purana Mandir' (1984), and 'Veerana' (1988) feature her in key roles, making her a familiar face in a series of cult classics that developed a substantial following through video libraries and television reruns long after their theatrical release. Her performances, often involving confrontations with supernatural entities, helped define the aesthetic and dramatic tone of Ramsay horror, which relied on a blend of fear, eroticism, and melodrama. While not part of mainstream critical acclaim, this body of work has a lasting cultural footprint. The Ramsay films, with actors like Kullar, are retrospectively appreciated for their distinctive camp value, technical ingenuity within constraints, and their role in sustaining a dedicated genre film industry parallel to Bollywood. Her filmography represents a specific chapter in Indian cinema history where horror found a consistent, if modest, commercial outlet. This has cemented her status as a memorable icon for fans of vintage Indian horror, ensuring her work continues to be discovered and discussed in contexts of cult film analysis and nostalgia.
