Malayalam cinema, also known as Mollywood, refers to the Malayalam-language film industry based in Kerala, India. With a rich history spanning over a century, Malayalam cinema has evolved significantly, producing a wide range of films that showcase the state's culture, traditions, and values.
Malayalam cinema, the film industry based in the southern Indian state of Kerala, has long held a reputation for being distinct from its larger counterparts like Bollywood or Tamil cinema. While often smaller in scale, it is immense in its impact, celebrated globally for its realism, social critique, and narrative innovation. To understand Malayalam cinema is to understand the psyche of Kerala—a land defined by lush landscapes, high literacy, political awakening, and a deep sense of humanism.
For decades, Indian cinema was a two-headed giant: Bollywood’s song-and-drama spectacle and Tamil/Telugu’s larger-than-life star vehicles. But quietly, from the humid, literate coast of Kerala, a revolution has been brewing. Malayalam cinema, affectionately known as "Mollywood," has shed its old identity of melodrama and emerged as the most intelligent, nuanced, and daring film industry in India.
Malayalam cinema is a pioneer in technical excellence on lean budgets. It was the first Indian industry to produce a ( My Dear Kuttichathan

