Www.mallumv.guru -vettaiyan -2024- Tamil True W... -
Malayalam cinema is currently in a "New Wave" that feels less like a wave and more like a steady tide. It refuses to explain Kerala to the outsider, and that is its greatest strength. You are not watching a film; you are eavesdropping on a culture that is deeply literate, politically charged, hungry for good food, and surprisingly gentle in its violence. It is, quite simply, the most honest mirror Indian cinema has right now.
Films like Ee.Ma.Yau (2018) (a dark comedy about a funeral) and Nayattu (2021) (a chase thriller about three police officers) explore the underbelly of the caste system and police brutality—subjects mainstream Indian cinema usually sanitizes. However, the critique is not always flawless. There is a tendency to romanticize the "Naxalite" past or the "rebel" archetype, sometimes glossing over the human cost. But the very fact that these conversations happen in a multiplex in Thrissur is a testament to the state's progressive cultural core. In Kerala, the weather is not atmosphere; it is a narrative device. The relentless rain in Rorschach (2022) amplifies the psychological decay. The misty high ranges of Bhramaram (2009) create a sense of spiritual unease. www.MalluMv.Guru -Vettaiyan -2024- Tamil TRUE W...
Here is a review of how Malayalam cinema and Kerala culture exist in a state of constant, beautiful dialogue. What sets Malayalam cinema apart from its counterparts in Bollywood or even Kollywood is its obsession with the mundane. In a typical Malayalam film, the hero doesn’t burst onto the scene in a leather jacket; he is seen sipping over-extended black tea from a glass chaya kada (tea shop), reading a newspaper, and arguing about politics. Malayalam cinema is currently in a "New Wave"
Kerala culture is defined by its geography—the kayal (backwaters), the malakhamar (hill slopes), and the crowded angadi (marketplace). Malayalam cinema is perhaps the only industry in India that knows how to shoot rain without making the actors look miserable. The umbrella becomes a tool of seduction; the muddy road becomes an obstacle of status. If there is a weakness, it is the industry’s addiction to "Gulf nostalgia" and the Mohanlal-Mammootty era mythology. A significant chunk of Kerala culture involves the Gulf migration (the Gulfan ), and while Unda (2019) handled it well, many films tend to paint the 1980s and 90s as the "golden era" of Kerala morality. It is, quite simply, the most honest mirror
For the uninitiated, Malayalam cinema is often reduced to a simple tagline: “realistic, small-budget films with great writing.” While accurate, this description misses the forest for the trees. At its core, contemporary Malayalam cinema (often called Mollywood) is not just an industry; it is a cultural anthropology project set to celluloid. It doesn’t just use Kerala culture as a backdrop—it breathes it, dissects it, argues with it, and occasionally, romanticizes it.





