Start with Kumbalangi Nights —a visual masterpiece about four brothers in a stilt house, exploring masculinity and mental health. Then dive into Sudani from Nigeria , which perfectly captures Kerala’s obsession with football (soccer) and its complicated relationship with outsiders.
Malayalam cinema is currently in a golden age because it has stopped trying to be "pan-Indian." It has leaned into the specifics: the dialect of Thrissur, the cadence of a Thiruvananthapuram accent, the taste of kappayum meenum (tapioca and fish).
Unlike the larger-than-life heroism of Bollywood or the mass spectacle of Kollywood, a classic Malayalam hero is often... ordinary. He is a newspaper editor with a paunch (K. P. A. C. Lalitha, anyone? Or perhaps the reluctant everyman played by Mohanlal in Bharatham ). He is a fisherman struggling with ego ( Kireedam ). She is a mother navigating hypocrisy ( How Old Are You? ).
