Food, too, is culture. Malayalam cinema has never shied away from the glorious specificity of Kerala cuisine: the puttu and kadala curry for breakfast, the karimeen pollichathu (pearl spot fish) wrapped in banana leaf, the sadhya served on a plantain leaf with exactly 26 items. In films like Sudani from Nigeria (2018), when a Nigerian footballer learns to eat with his hands, tearing appam into beef stew , the moment is not comedy — it’s integration.
To watch a Malayalam film is to attend a town hall meeting. It is a cinema that borrows its rhythm from the monsoons—sometimes gentle and persistent, sometimes violently flooding everything in its path. It critiques the culture while loving it fiercely. It shows the tharavadu falling apart and the NRI crying alone in a Sharjah studio apartment. www.MalluMv.Guru - Paradise -2024- Malayalam H...
As we enter 2024, www.MalluMv.Guru is set to become a hub for: Food, too, is culture