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Kerala’s famous monsoon is often romanticised in mainstream Indian cinema as a background for song-and-dance sequences. In Malayalam realism, the rain is a character of despair. In Adoor’s Mukhamukham (Face to Face, 1984), the relentless rain mirrors the protagonist’s psychological disintegration. This cultural reading of nature—not as a pretty postcard but as a force of melancholy and renewal—is quintessentially Keralite, drawn from a land where it rains for months on end.
This is most famously embodied by the characters of the legendary screenwriter Sreenivasan. In masterpieces like Sandesham (1991) and Vadakkunokkiyanthram (1989), the protagonist is not fighting a villain; he is fighting his own ego, his family’s hypocrisy, and the absurdities of political ideology. Sandesham remains a timeless cultural artifact because it dissected the factionalism of the CPI and CPI(M) with surgical precision—something only a deeply political audience could appreciate. The average Malayali viewer does not need the ideological lines drawn in black and white; they laugh wryly when the character realizes that 'ideology' is just a coat to wear for convenience. xwapserieslat tango premium show mallu nayan hot