Go to content|Go to the main menu|Go to search

edhouse-CookieGdpr-Policy-s
2183657
2
/en/gdpr/
218650B6A

Unlike the larger Bollywood or even Telugu/Tamil industries, Malayalam cinema has historically prioritized slice-of-life narratives, often shot in real locations (backwaters, plantations, crowded Kochi lanes, rural homes). The visual language itself carries Kerala’s geography: monsoon rain, tharavadu (ancestral homes), village temples, and coastal fishing villages are not just backdrops but active storytelling elements.

Kerala has high literacy, a vibrant tradition of left-leaning public activism, and a strong culture of reading (libraries per capita are among India’s highest). This feeds into cinema: scripts often feel novelistic, with layered characters and social critique. Directors like Adoor Gopalakrishnan ( Elippathayam ) and John Abraham ( Amma Ariyan ) directly engaged with feudal hangovers, land reforms, Naxalite movements, and caste.

That is an interesting feature, because the relationship between Malayalam cinema and Kerala culture is unusually deep, reciprocal, and distinct from other Indian film industries. Here’s why it stands out:

Would you like a curated list of films that best exemplify this feature – maybe one each from the 1980s, 2000s, and 2020s?

In most film industries, “culture” means costumes and festival songs. In Malayalam cinema, culture is the plot, the conflict, the humor, and the aesthetic. You cannot fully understand a good Malayalam film without understanding Kerala’s specific history of land reforms, migration, communist movements, religious coexistence, and its complex relationship with the Gulf and IT booms.

The legendary “innocent” sarcasm, patti (banter) among friends, and the karutha chaya kada (black tea stall) conversations – these are distinctly Keralite. Films like Sandhesam or Ramji Rao Speaking derive comedy from Malayali frugality, bureaucratic cynicism, and extended family dynamics in a way that doesn’t translate well outside the culture.

Directors like Lijo Jose Pellissery ( Jallikattu , Ee.Ma.Yau ) and Dileesh Pothan ( Maheshinte Prathikaaram ) have pushed magical realism rooted in Kerala’s ritualistic, animalistic, and often absurd local realities. Ee.Ma.Yau is essentially a funeral in a Latin Catholic fishing village – shot in real time, with all the social hierarchies, drunken fights, and raw grief laid bare.

Theyyam , Kathakali , Kalaripayattu , Onam sadya , Vallam kali (boat races) – these aren’t token song sequences. They often drive the plot: Vanaprastham uses Kathakali to explore caste and identity; Ore Kadal uses a theyyam performer as a metaphor for suppressed rage.

Many films explore the unique social fabric of Kerala – the matrilineal past ( Marumakkathayam ), the rise of communism, the Syrian Christian merchant class, the Mappila Muslim coastal culture, and the ambivalence of Gulf migration. For example, Kireedam (1989) isn’t just about a son’s failure; it’s about a lower-middle-class Kerala family’s honor economy. Perumazhakkalam deals with religious bigotry in a coastal town.

More posts

Edhouse newsletter

Get the latest updates from the world of Edhouse – news, events, and current software and hardware trends.

By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy.

Thank you for your interest in subscribing to our newsletter! To complete your registration you need to confirm your subscription. We have just sent you a confirmation link to the email address you provided. Please click on this link to complete your registration. If you do not find the email, please check your spam or "Promotions" folder.