I always had nothing but detest for perpetual fans of Malayalam
cinema. It arose from the total neglect or ignorance that they have
exhibited towards world cinema over the years. Its because they
continue to live in a world of entertainment that the filmmakers of the
state have created with substantial help from them. Since the '90s
movies made in this part of the world have become overtly burdened with
disgustingly stereotypical characters, situations and dialogues. With
considerable support from people who choose to have zero access to
movies made in languages other than Malayalam, the people who churn out
such movies have succeeded in etching certain symbols into the minds of
unsuspecting viewers so that these are supposed to be the ingredients
of any movie to be made in the local lingo. So we have an array of
movies made in the Unni-thatravadu-kindi-montha-dhoti-ma in
law-daughter in law-kids-tears-sambar template and we can expect more
to follow suit. Therefore, anything different from this framework is
expected to evoke wrath in these narrow-minded thick heads and it's in
this context that i attempt to review the most sophisticatedly made
Malayalam movie of all time-Big B.
I had always found it very
difficult to sit through the credits at the beginning of movies made in
Malayalam. It always comes up in white against a black or dark blue
background (with few variety in the font used) instead of a prologue of
the story. Apart from an alteration to this routine, the opening
sequence of Big B is so typical that I was prompted to wonder if I had
been wrong in my estimation.
But all that was to change with the
introduction of the protagonist, played by Mammootty. From then on,
debutant director Amal Neerad makes sure that his maiden venture looks
like nothing that have ever been made in the movie industry of the
State. He might have worked alongside the man who changed the way
Bollywood used to make movies, Ram Gopal Varma, for years, but his
movie bears an unmistakable stamp of none other than John Woo.An
acclaimed cinematographer himself, Neerad uses his camera with such
finesse that it brings forth a unique viewing experience in Malayalam
cinema. He has drawn inspiration from Hollywood movies and the
resulting super slow motion sequences are so different from those in
the rest of the locally made films. The background score is a treat to
the ears of those who were fed up with the obscurely monotonous sounds
that usually accompany those typical visuals and is the best ever as
far as Malayalam films are considered.
Followers of the afore
mentioned typical movies may find it hard to digest it but the fact is
that Big B is the most stylish movie ever to be made in Malayalam. They
may claim that the movie doesn't have a story to tell. And I sincerely
dont know what a story is and as long as a movie is visually stunning
the story is what I care about the least. My mind drew a
blank as I tried to imagine the last time i saw a keralite super hero
cock a shotgun single-handedly a la Schwarzenegger in T2. Mammootty does
that in Big B and I couldn't help being elated as I watched it. And I
feel that this is the movie that we should show others so that it will
speak for itself that this is what we are capable of doing.
Though
it is set in Kochi, Big B is not in the league of the cult movie 'Stop
Violence' and it's not entirely on the underworld. But it could be
rated alongside 'Keerthichakra' for its offbeat treatment.