Films of Sreenivasan that aged like truth

0
4
Films of Sreenivasan that aged like truth


Sreenivasan was Malayalam cinema’s Simpson; Stories that aged like truth

(Picture Courtesy: Facebook)

Sreenivasan was often called the sharpest mirror of Malayali society. Like The Simpsons, his films did not predict the future by magic. Instead, they showed deep truth. Sreenivasan understood how people think, how power works. Through his works he showd how society repeats its mistakes. This was the reason why many scenes from his films later appeared almost exactly in real life.

Ayaal Kadhayezhuthukayanu: The famous chair fight

‘Ayaal Kadhayezhuthukayanu’ (1998) gave Malayalam cinema one of its most memorable scenes — the chair dispute in a government office. Sreenivasan’s character Ramakrishnan comes to take charge, but the outgoing officer refuses to leave the chair. Both sit in the same cabin and both claiming authority.

Sreenivasan (1)

(Picture Courtesy: Facebook)

Years later, in late 2024, a real-life incident almost identical to this scene happened at the District Medical Office in Kozhikode. The comedy suddenly felt like a documentary, showing how power struggles never change.

‘Keedam’ director on Sreenivasan

In an exclusive interview with ETimes, the ‘Keedam’ director Rahul Riji Nair says, “I had only spent 10 days with him and those 10 days are the biggest achievement in my life. I consider him as the GOAT in cinema.” He further said that Sreenivasan was someone who puts a lot of dedication in anything he does.

Sandesham: Politics inside the home

‘Sandesham’ (1991) showed how politics can divide families. Two brothers support rival parties and turn their home into a battlefield filled with fake protests, false cases, and moral collapse.

Sreenivasan

(Picture Courtesy: Facebook)

Even after more than 30 years, the film feels fresh. Kerala has seen repeated political fights, scandals, and family divisions just like in the film. Every election season, scenes and dialogues from Sandesam resurface online, proving how accurately Sreenivasan understood political extremism.

Varavelpu: The Gulf dream and reality

In Varavelpu (1989), Mohanlal plays a man returning from the Gulf with dreams of starting a business. Instead, the character faces corruption, unions, along with endless other problems.

Sreenivasan

(Picture Courtesy: Facebook)

This film showed the real struggles of thousands of Gulf returnees. Even today, many NRIs face the same issues such as red tape, political pressure, and failed dreams. Sreenivasan showed this pain long before it became widely discussed.

Nadodikkattu: Migration and joblessness

Nadodikkattu (1987) and its sequels follow two educated but unemployed men who are chasing Gulf dreams. Even though their journey is funny, it’s deeply sad. The film captured the desperation of jobless youth and the mass migration from Kerala. That reality shaped generations and continues even now.

Udayananu Tharam: Cinema’s ugly truth

‘Udayananu Tharam’ (2005) exposed ego clashes, fake stardom, copying, along with power games inside the film industry.Years later, real debates about power, inequality, and control in cinema proved how true Sreenivasan’s satire was.Sreenivasan didn’t predict the future. He understood people and that made his films evergreen.


LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here