HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentSarcasm is the highest form of wit in Mallu cinema

Sarcasm is the highest form of wit in Mallu cinema

Wit is plotting its matinee moment.

October 15, 2022 / 11:50 IST
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Humour from this part of the South, delivered in typical Mallu accents from Thrissur to Thiruvananthapuram, has always been about repartee and retort. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
Humour from this part of the South, delivered in typical Mallu accents from Thrissur to Thiruvananthapuram, has always been about repartee and retort. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

Sarcasm, satire, sardonic asides – these are a few of every Malayalee’s favourite things. Replies that verge on the rude, an eye roll before punchline, rehearsed exit lines… Suffice to say any self-respecting Mallu wants to have the last word.

Humour from this part of the South, delivered in typical Mallu accents from Thrissur to Thiruvananthapuram, has always been about repartee and retort. One-liners that may pass you by if you are still busy laughing at the previous one. Sprung on us in the spring of Priyadarshan films – classics like Vellanakalude Nadu (The Land of White Elephants), Chithram, Vandanam, Akkare Akkare Akkare (Far, Far Away) – where general concerns made a giggly cocktail with light-hearted dialogues.

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Mohanlal and Sreenivasan were a cult pairing, famously in Nadodikkattu (Gypsy Breeze), with the jest mainly in their small talk. Just like a good romance showcases witty banter between the boy and girl, good chemistry between any two characters is comedy gold, and this pair delivered each time.

The lead couple in a film may be ha ha or not, but it is always the minor characters whose performances fuel the funny. In ensemble casts every artist counts, right down to the extra with the littlest to do. The work of comedians like KPAC Lalitha, Kalpana and Sukumari, made the ordinary women they played relatable for the brilliant display of casual quips. Their appearance in a scene instantly lightened the audience mood: Lalitha in Manichitrathazhu (The Ornate Lock), Kalpana in Bangalore Days and Sukumari in Boeing Boeing. Their passing has made Malayalam cinema grimmer in every way.