(1965) not only brought international acclaim but also captured the unique coastal life and folklore of Kerala. 2. Social and Political Awareness
Films like Jaya Jaya Jaya Jaya Hey (2022)—a black comedy about domestic abuse—found its audience online because the conversation around marital violence is finally public in Kerala. Nayattu (2021), a thriller about three police officers on the run after being falsely accused of custodial violence, became a national talking point precisely because it mirrored actual Kerala political headlines. (1965) not only brought international acclaim but also
To watch Malayalam cinema is to eavesdrop on Kerala’s soul. It is a cinema that finds the profound in the provincial, the epic in the everyday. It is stubbornly, proudly, and beautifully Keralan — with all its socialist hangovers, its religious pluralism, its monsoon melancholy, its fierce intellect, and its infinite capacity for a good cup of tea and a better argument. As long as Kerala has stories to tell, its cinema will be there, holding up a mirror, and gently turning it into a window. Nayattu (2021), a thriller about three police officers