Stephen Musings

Not on my merit but by His Grace,

PREMALU: TIMELESS LOVE TALE WOVEN INTO MODERN FABRIC

Just the other day, I caught the hit Malayalam film “Premalu” on an OTT platform. Despite my initial skepticism, I found myself pondering over its success at the box office. However, as I watched the film, I couldn’t help but feel a bit disconnected. It was only after the credits rolled that I began to grasp its significance, realizing its resonance with the youth in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, and Andhra Pradesh.

Its dubbed versions in Tamil and Telugu were also box-office hits

Premalu truly reflects today’s youth, especially from Kerala. The protagonist, Sachin, embodies the typical Kerala youngster—average in academics, indulges in alcohol, and struggling to express his feelings, especially for a girl he’s been yearning for over four years. At home, he clashes with his family, his father even wanting him to work as a delivery boy for the family bakery. Sachin dreams of escaping to the UK with his friends, but financial constraints act as a road block. It’s during this period that he reconnects with Amal Davis, a schoolmate who is academically better, focused and out bound. The contrast between Sachin and Amal forms a central theme in the film, with Amal leading the narrative. Amal’s girlfriend, already admitted to IIT Roorkee, motivates him to prepare for the GATE exam. Amal heads to Hyderabad, the coaching hub for GATE, and Sachin joins him to pass the time before reapplying for a UK visa.

The major plot of the movie unfolds in Hyderabad, incorporating Telugu elements, hence the title Premalu. In Hyderabad, the IT hub of South India, we meet Reenu, a newcomer to the IT profession, which serves as a career destination for many young individuals. Reenu embodies the modern, spirited Malayalee girl, thriving in Hyderabad’s bustling metro life. By chance, Sachin and Reenu meet at a wedding reception, and Sachin, the typical Malayalee, finds himself captivated but unable to express his feelings to the girl. Frustrated with his misfit status in GATE coaching, Sachin takes up a job at a fast-food outlet, excelling even in door-to-door delivery, a task he once detested for his father’s bakery.

The film’s climax is noteworthy—a blend of romance, tragedy, and comedy. The lover turns into a villain, and the protective gear gifted by the lover becomes a weapon that foils his own plans. It’s during this tense scene that a love proposal unfolds. As Sachin eventually escape to the UK, the heroine herself questions about his survival with limited English proficiency and lack of self-assurance.

Crux of the movie: The film delves into the struggles of a teenager lacking confidence and direction, without any abilities or any artistic talents, relying on alcohol to step out of his comfort zone, and ultimately seeking refuge in the UK. It’s his more qualified and outgoing schoolmate who takes the lead in his life’s next phase. He feels an irresistible pull towards a girl brimming with confidence and a clear vision for her future, starkly contrasting his own uncertainty. She becomes the source of hope and purpose in his life, injecting it with newfound meaning. A villain emerges out of her friends.

This is a contemporary spin on a timeless love story, featuring a commoner captivated by a princess, only to discover that a prince is the true antagonist. Against all odds, the lover triumphs, marrying the princess and embarking on a joyous journey together.

Director cum writer Girish A D’s previous films, “Thaneer Mathen” (2019) and “Super Sharanya” (2023), were both low-budget productions featuring new faces, yet both yielded great returns for the producers. Girish’s first film explored life in a high school, while his second focused on the world of an engineering college. Premalu’snarrative commences from the last day of an engineering college.

Produced by Fahad Fasil, actor, Dileesh Pothen, Director, and Syam Pushkaran, scriptwriter, Premalu stands as a testament to the trust placed in Girish by the film fraternity—a trust that the film’s success has clearly validated. This marks a hat trick for Girish.

2 responses to “PREMALU: TIMELESS LOVE TALE WOVEN INTO MODERN FABRIC”

  1. Malayalam Cinema as a whole is facing mediocrity right now but we are being put up on a pedestal by some north Indian reviewers and social media, funded by the film makers themselves. Tamil cinema is the better one right now, they experiment in wide variety of genres we don’t do that. Here we stick on to a success formula and keep on creating similar kind of films. Our industry in general is too complacent and lazy to try anything new or ambitious within our restrictions that it’s not even funny anymore. There are very few who have seriously studied movie making.

    Directors or writers and even producers aren’t interested in researching new stuff or creating variety content with new techniques, feel and styles. Hence the flood of average and exhausting mediocre films in the last few years. Malayalam industry has this weird obsession with casting the same few actors in almost every movie that comes out ,if there happens to be one successful movie for them. Like recently it’s Aparna Balamurali, Binu Pappu, Swathi Das Prabhu, Neslan etc in almost every movie. And their characters have no flavor. All seem tailor made to cast these people. We cannot think about anything out of the box, only failed romances, family feuds and stuff like that. Now it is mostly boy-girl romance, rather than man-woman. If you happen to see anything different, they are often stolen.

    The portrayal of modern/urban youth in Malayalam movies is cringe. We almost never get it right and end up as a mockery. The ‘new wave’ of Malayalam film is simply the result of directors and technicians adapting western way of filmmaking and is not quintessentially Malayalam cinema.

    Premalu is simply one among them. Probably a “feel good’ movie for the youth. It exemplifies also the very poor quality of our education. For the unemployed youth of Kerala, with mediocre education, who cannot even talk any another language, leave alone writing properly, and looking for job elsewhere, it is probably a feel good movie.

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    1. Thanks for the lengthy response to the blog. Time to think over. Box office is not the means to assess the quality of movies. We need critics like you to make us aware of where we are.

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