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Music has always been an integral part of Malayalam cinema. The industry has produced some remarkable musicians, including M. S. Baburaj, V. Dakshinamoorthy, and Ilaiyaraaja. The iconic songs from films like "Chemmeen" (1965), "Munda" (1990), and "Devarmagan" (1992) are still popular today. Contemporary musicians like A. R. Rahman, G. V. Prakash Kumar, and M. Jayachandran have continued the tradition, creating memorable soundtracks.
Look at the icons of the new wave: Fahadh Faasil. He isn't 6’2"; he isn't flexing biceps. He plays a bumbling sales executive ( June ), a corrupt cop with anxiety issues ( Joji ), or a desperate father lying to get a school admission ( Njan Prakashan ). The Malayali hero is fragile, flawed, and fiercely intelligent. This reflects a core cultural truth: in Kerala (which has the highest literacy rate in India), brains always triumph over brawn. Music has always been an integral part of Malayalam cinema
A huge, unspoken cultural shift in Kerala is the labor crisis. Keralites don't want to do manual labor; they want Gulf jobs. As a result, North Indian and Bengali migrants build Kerala’s houses and run its restaurants. Baburaj, V
: Produced and directed by J.C. Daniel , the "father of Malayalam cinema," this first silent film defied the contemporary trend of mythological stories by focusing on a social theme. Contemporary musicians like A