While often played for laughs (e.g., Jagathy Sreekumar in Godfather , 1991), these characters represented the economic miracle of a state with no industrial base. Malayalam cinema showed the tension between the educated, landless youth and the uneducated laborer returning with suitcases full of cash. Films like Mazhayethum Munpe (1995) wept for the loneliness of the expatriate, acknowledging that while money flowed in, the soul of the family was bleeding out. Directors like Fazil and Sathyan Anthikad perfected the "family drama"—a genre that is essentially a sociological study of the Malayali household. Films like Sandhesam (1991) satirized the factionalism of Kerala politics (the split between the Communist factions and the Congress), showing how ideology had been reduced to street hooliganism. The father figure in these films—usually wise, tired, and economically insecure—represented the "average Malayali" caught between his children’s greed and his own fading relevance. Part IV: The New Wave – Neurosis and Nuance (2010s–Present) The last decade has witnessed a seismic shift. With the advent of OTT platforms and a younger, more urbanized audience, Malayalam cinema has abandoned the "hero" entirely. The new protagonists are deeply flawed, neurotic, and overwhelmingly middle-class. The Weaponization of the Mundu In global media, the Kerala mundu (the traditional white dhoti) is a symbol of simplicity. In contemporary Malayalam cinema, it has become a symbol of subtle violence and moral ambiguity. Consider Kumbalangi Nights (2019). The character Shammi , a seemingly charming patriarch who wears his mundu with a tight, militant fold, becomes the terrifying embodiment of toxic masculinity. The film uses the visual of the traditional household as a trap, not a sanctuary.
Unlike the parallel cinema of Bengal (which was often funded by government bodies), Kerala’s middle stream was commercially viable. It didn’t abandon the thriller or family drama structure; instead, it infused them with devastating realism. No discussion of Kerala culture is complete without addressing the Land Reforms Act and the fall of the feudal gentry. M. T. Vasudevan Nair’s Nirmalyam (1973, though its influence peaked in the 80s) and Adoor Gopalakrishnan’s Elippathayam (The Rat Trap, 1981) are visual theses on this collapse. While often played for laughs (e
Malayalam cinema is not merely a product of Kerala culture; it is the conscience of Kerala. While politicians and tourist boards present a state of backwaters, Ayurveda, and literacy, the cinema picks up the trash left behind—the casteist slurs whispered in buses, the sexual harassment within the tharavadu , the emptiness of the Gulf villa, and the exhaustion of the woman in the kitchen. Directors like Fazil and Sathyan Anthikad perfected the
Following this, the golden age of the 1960s and 70s brought the era of the "three Ms": Madhu, Sathyan, and Prem Nazir. While Prem Nazir offered the cultural trope of the romantic hero (once holding a Guinness record for the most lead roles), it was Sathyan who embodied the melancholic Malayali intellectual. Films like Murappennu (1965) and Kadalpalam explored the rigid tharavadu (ancestral home) system, where matrilineal customs (Marumakkathayam) clashed with the rise of the nuclear family. Part IV: The New Wave – Neurosis and
Similarly, Joji (2021), inspired by Macbeth , transforms a lush plantation in Kottayam into a pressure cooker of feudal greed. The culture of apparent peace—the afternoon nap, the heavy lunch, the quiet veranda—is shown as a breeding ground for murder. While India debates secularism, Malayalam cinema has bravely tackled the colonization of the church and the hypocrisy of the temple. Amen (2013) and Thondimuthalum Driksakshiyum (2017) treat faith with tenderness but skewer the human beings who run the institutions. The Great Indian Kitchen (2021) was a watershed moment. It wasn't just a film; it was a cultural weapon. The movie showcased the physical labor of the Kerala woman—grinding, chopping, cleaning—while the men discuss politics outside. The finale, where the protagonist leaves her husband and throws away the sāmbhār (lentil stew) he refused to eat, became a viral reality. It sparked actual divorces and public debates about marital rape (still not fully criminalized in India) and patriarchy, proving that Malayalam cinema remains the state’s most effective social reformer. The Dark Side: Caste in "God's Own Country" Kerala is often marketed as a secular, communist haven, but films like Keshu (2009, though banned) and Njan Steve Lopez (2014) and Biriyani (2013) revealed the quiet apartheid. Biriyani showed the police brutality and classism against the Pakistani community and lower castes in Malappuram. The recent Aavasavyuham (The Arbitrary, 2022), a mockumentary, used the sci-fi genre to talk about caste oppression in the most literal way—treating Dalits as aliens. This ability to hide brutal critique within genre tropes is uniquely Malayali. Part V: The Expatriate and the Monsoon You cannot separate Kerala culture from the monsoon. In Malayalam cinema, rain is not just a backdrop; it is a character. It signals clarity, revelation, or destruction. In Kireedam (1989), the rain washes away a young man's dreams as he is beaten by a mob. In Ente Veedu Appuvinteyum (2003), the rain symbolizes the cleansing of a troubled marriage.
Furthermore, the Pravasi (expatriate) narrative has come full circle. Earlier films showed the Gulfan returning rich. Modern films like Take Off (2017), based on the evacuation of Malayali nurses from Iraq, show the precariousness of the diaspora. Unda (2019) follows a police contingent of Malayali officers in the Maoist-affected jungles of North India—exploring how Keralites export their laid-back, chaya (tea) drinking culture into hostile environments. The comedy stems from the inability of the Kerala police to adapt to a different India, highlighting the cultural isolation of the Malayali within India itself. As of the mid-2020s, Malayalam cinema is dominating the Indian OTT space. It is no longer a regional curiosity; it is the standard for intelligent Indian storytelling. Yet, the industry is not immune to the darker sides of Kerala culture: the rampant drug abuse among the youth (captured brutally in Bhoothakaalam ), the political extremism (navigated in Nayattu ), and the loneliness of the elderly (examined in Home ).
Elippathayam remains a landmark. It follows a feudal landlord trapped in his crumbling manor, obsessively checking a compound wall that no longer holds any meaning. The character’s inability to cope with modern, socialist Kerala is a direct commentary on the cultural hangover of the upper caste. The film doesn't preach; it simply watches the man rot, representing the slow death of a feudal mindset that still lingered in the subconscious of Kerala’s villages. If Adoor showed decay, Padmarajan showed desire. Kerala has a public culture of high morality (abstinence, literacy, health), but a private culture of intense repression. Padmarajan’s masterpieces— Oridathoru Phayalwan (1982) and Aparan (The Double, 1988)—explored the doppelgänger, sexual confusion, and the violence of small-town gossip. He understood that the Kerala backwater is not always serene; it is a swamp of unspoken resentments. This cultural complexity—the smiling neighbor who betrays you—is a staple of the Malayali psyche, and Padmarajan encoded it into celluloid. Part III: The Dilemma of the Modern Man (1990s) The 1990s in Malayalam cinema are often dismissed as a "dark age" of slapstick comedy (the Priyadarshan era of Kilukkam and Mithunam ) and formulaic action. However, looking back, these films captured the rise of consumerism and the Gulf migration. The Gulfan (Gulf Returnee) The single biggest cultural shift in modern Kerala is the Gulf diaspora. Almost every Malayali family has a member in Dubai, Doha, or Riyadh. The 1990s cinema introduced the archetype of the Gulfan : the nouveau riche who drives a Toyota Corolla, wears a gold chain, and speaks a broken mix of Malayalam and English.