The Malayalam New Wave (post-2010) has re-engaged with Kerala’s changing culture—rising privatization, religious fundamentalism, the migrant labor crisis, and urban alienation.
Furthermore, the matrilineal past (Marumakkathayam) of Kerala’s upper castes has been a recurring trope. Parinayam (The Wedding, 1994) and Aranyakam (1988) explored the sambandham system and the tragic lives of women trapped in feudal hierarchies. Modern films like The Great Indian Kitchen (2021) continue this tradition by shifting the lens from feudal kitchens to modern ones, critiquing the patriarchy that survives despite high literacy and political awareness. The film’s quiet rage—a woman washing dishes, grinding batter, wiping floors—resonated so deeply because every Malayali recognized the architecture of that home and the weight of those rituals. The Malayalam New Wave (post-2010) has re-engaged with