Thursday, December 24, 2015

15 GREAT EXAMPLES OF MALAYALAM FILMS THAT BEGIN ‘IN MEDIAS RES’


film Oru Vadakkan Veera Gatha
The way a story is told is as important as the story itself, only if not more, no matter how amusing the subject matter. Even a great story could go down the q-trap if not narrated in a way appealing to the listener. There are several narrative techniques used in literature and films, which in order to hold the interest of the reader or the audience, employ various elements to set a sequence of events in the plot to do justice to the overall story. ‘In medias res’ is one such technique that is as popular as is effective. Latin for “in the middle of things”, this is when a book or movie starts in the middle of the story creating curiosity, and the bygone events are filled in through flashbacks or verbal accounts. There are several films in Malayalam that begins in medias res, where we are thrown right into the middle of action and the root cause of it all comes out only in time. Following is a list of such movies that brilliantly employ this non-linear narrative technique, scrambling the time sequence in ways beneficial to the story, and it doesn’t necessarily mean they are better or worse than each other as movies in whole, but only in their effectiveness in having started in medias res alone.

15. Thirakkatha 2008
screenplay: Ranjith

Thirakkatha concerns a search into the life of a yesteryear acting sensation called Malavika who apparently disappeared from public view while at the peak of her career. When the movie begins, the image of the actor is long forgotten and the main narrative that records the quest for her whereabouts runs parallel to the chronological rebuilding of the actor’s turbulent earlier life.

14. Oru CBI Diary Kuruppu 1988
screenplay: S.N. Swamy

One of the all-time popular investigative thrillers in Malayalam, Oru CBI Diary Kuruppu directed by K. Madhu opens with the discovery of the bloodied dead body of a young housewife called Omana and advances through the particulars of the difficult investigation of what easily could have been concluded as a suicide but is eventually reasoned as not.

13. Sadayam 1992
screenplay: M.T. Vasudevan Nair

When the movie begins, Sathyanathan is already in prison having committed four murders including that of two young girls. Sadayam directed by Sibi Malayil explores the series of events leading to the ridiculous crime and how the retelling affects the position of the vengeful prison doctor who is also father to one of the victims.

12. Mumbai Police 2013
screenplay: Bobby- Sanjay

The accident in the beginning that impairs the memory of ACP Antony Moses happens immediately after he supposedly solves the murder of his dear friend. But now in order to find those answers he has to once again piece together from his ailing memory all that lead up to the fateful accident. The narrative structure of Mumbai Police is what especially helps to make it a taut thriller.

11. Kathavasheshan 2004
screenplay: T.V. Chandran

The unofficial probe by a woman into her fiancé‘s suicide for no apparent reason forms the narrative spine of T.V. Chandran’s Kathavasheshan. The non-linear account of his past life weaved together by her journey through its myriad characters is what gradually unravels the difficult reasons that drive a sane man to take his own life.

10. Ozhimuri 2012
screenplay: Jeyamohan

A fifty five year old woman files for divorce from her seventy one year old husband in a case that seems far too ludicrous given their age and the passive temperament of the woman. As the trial proceeds, the marital life of the two unravels at the same time attempting to reason the plea for separation. Madhupal’s Ozhimuri is as clever in narrative as it is with the subject matter.

9. Nirakkoottu 1985
screenplay: Dennis Joseph

Ravi Varma, a convict on death sentence for the brutal murder of his wife, escapes prison right before his day of execution. He then recounts the events to the victim’s sister, a journalist who had previously published articles about the murder incriminating him, but turns out to be misinformed. Ravi Varma’s murky past also lurks in the background as a threatening character through the better part of the film. 

8. Utharam 1989
screenplay: M.T. Vasudevan Nair

The movie opens with the mysterious death of an up and coming poetess. An investigation into the reasons that ushered this happily married young woman to death takes us way back to her past that leads to shocking revelations with twisted consequences. Taking the form of a detective thriller, the two halves of Utharam are laid parallel to each other in narrative sequence.

7. Panchagni 1986
screenplay: M.T. Vasudevan Nair

In the opening scene set in prison, Indiira is on a hunger strike to buy parole in order to go meet her ailing mother. It’s through her bitter experiences and taunts while on parole that we get to see glimpses of her past life, most of which are joined through verbal accounts and rumors eventually arriving at its shocking conclusion that wouldn’t have been as effective had it not started in medias res.

6. Kamaladalam 1992
screenplay: A.K. Lohithadas

A major part of the tragedy in Nandagopan’s life including the violent end of his wife is over by the time the movie begins, and he’s already a raging alcoholic wreck. The image that the society draws of him gradually appears to contradict the person that he is, and his past, in addition to the fancy of the wags, comes to life in his own vivid retelling to his protégé in time.

5. Oru Vadakkan Veeragatha 1989
screenplay: M.T. Vasudevan Nair

Here the present and the past are not just separated by time, but also by the diametrically opposite perception of the central character Chandu. The views of popular culture is what represents the present, and the past narrated by Chandu himself unfolds a series of unheard-of details that shows him in a new light boldly rewriting history.

4. Swapnadanam 1976
screenplay: K.G. George

The main plotline in this psychological drama unfolds through the psychiatric probing of the central character whose descend to madness is rationalized by his difficult marriage and his sorrow over a lost love. A very experimental approach at the time of its release, Swapnadanam is one of the pioneers in non-linear narrative technique that begins in medias res.

3. Adwaitham 1992
screenplay: T. Damodaran

Mysterious spiritual leader and celebrated god man Swami Amrithananda who arrives on a peace mission to Kerala begins to receive death threats. His complex past narrated in flashbacks revealing the true nature of a completely contradictory character inside the guru’s divine cloak, is interspersed with the desperate security measures taken to thwart the impeding danger making up an intensely layered narrative.

2.Yavanika 1982
screenplay: S.L. Puram Sadanandan, K.G. George

When the movie begins, Aiyappan is long gone, missing or murdered, and the investigation into the case is what gradually reveals the sheer size of this shady character’s iniquity through numerous accounts of people who knew or dealt with him when he was around. The scrambling of time sequence works very well with this genre always keeping the viewers' curiosity on edge.

1.Parinayam 1994
screenplay: M.T. Vasudevan Nair

Parinayam is the perfect example of a film beginning in medias res as it starts right at the middle. First there is a series of events that illustrates the ritualistic trial of a widow that got pregnant outside of marriage, and then there is the part that leads up to the mysterious pregnancy. The movie is structured in such a way that both halves are enmeshed into each other pushing the limits of engagement.

A few other films that also begin in medias res worth checking out are…
Rakuyilin Ragasadassil 1986 screenplay: Priyadarshan
Paleri Manikyam 2009 screenplay: Ranjith
Kalapani 1996 screenplay: T. Damodaran, Priyadarshan
Manivathoorile Aayiram Shivarathrikal 1987 screenplay: Fazil, Jagadish
Amrutham Gamaya 1987 screenplay: M.T. Vasudevan Nair

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