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Beyond the Backwaters: How Malayalam Cinema Became India’s Most Authentic Storyteller
Why ‘Mollywood’ is redefining realism in the age of pan-Indian blockbusters.
But something shifted in the last half-decade. Suddenly, film buffs in Delhi, Mumbai, and even Hollywood are whispering about a small film from Kochi called Minnal Murali , a political thriller titled Jana Gana Mana , or the visceral survival drama Kantara (a Kannada film often confused in the wave of South Indian cinema, but standing alongside Malayalam gems like Malik ).
Take the 2023 blockbuster 2018: Everyone is a Hero . It is a disaster film about the catastrophic Kerala floods. In Hollywood, this would be a CGI-fest focused on a lone hero. In Malayalam, it was an ensemble piece about neighbors, fishermen, and radio jockeys. The "hero" was the community.
For a traveler or a culture enthusiast, watching a Malayalam film is the next best thing to sitting in a thattukada (street-side food stall) in Thiruvananthapuram. It is noisy, political, deliciously specific, and ultimately, universally human.