#nanpakal nerathu mayakkam
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Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam (2022)
#Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam#malayalam cinema#indian cinema#Lijo Jose Pellissery#Mammootty#malayalam movie
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Had to go MIA because midterm season came early but Happy Letterboxd Sunday!
#nanpakal nerathu mayakkam#mammootty#pushpa#allu arjun#muthu#rajnikanth#enthiran#bombay#mani ratnam#oceans thirteen#george clooney#brad pitt#midsommar#puss in boots#paiyaa#golmaal
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Ramya Pandian: One good commercial break will change things for me
Ramya Pandian says that she is an actor who takes inspiration from everything she watches and comes across. “When I watch ‘80s films, I get inspired by actors like Saritha ma’am and Revathi ma’am. And when I watched the recently-released Ayali, I was so moved by what that little girl Abi Nakshatra did.” So, when she got to know that she was about to act with a veteran like Mammootty, who has a…
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#Accidental Farmer & Co#Accidental Farmer web series#Lijo Jose Pellissery#Mammootty#Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam#Ramya Pandian#Ramya Pandian Bigg Boss#Ramya Pandian interview#Ramya Pandian new movie#Ramya Pandian photoshoot
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teaser for mammootty's new film Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam directed by lijo jose pellissery. heard great things coming out of its premier at the international film festival of kerala this year.
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i think its so interesting how manjummel boys and nanpakal nerathu mayakkam were both malayalam - tamil films that used music, particularly ilaiyaaraja's so intricately within the storytelling. Both are very different films, but both use his music so intentionally within their narrative, it became a character all on its own. there is also something about how both films involve a road trip and existing in a sense of time that is removed from our daily linearity. its liminal.
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Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam
Note: this is not a review but more of an outpouring of thoughts that strike you when your mind is captivated by beautiful frames written, enacted and captured; maybe spoilers ahead.
Some movies are bold enough to force you to walk with the characters, often in sombrely long sequence of shots where nothing happens (nothing from the point of view of a regular movie-watcher). Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam is a spectacular example (and I am positive Malayalam cinema has a plethora of such examples, esp in recent times). But to do this, I would imagine, requires a boldness of a different kind.
I mean, imagine having an entire minute or two just of a sequence of shots showing Mammootty – a James who's just woken up as a Sundaram (but we dont know that yet) – walking into the village: first through lush-green paddy fields, then into the serpentine lanes of the village, turning around into a corner street, walking past an old man in his afternoon siesta under the shade of his thinnai, and finally to his house. and because this is no accidental placement, you'll find the same happen in the climax when Mammotty walks back to the bus all the way from "his" house – a beautifully-long sequence of shots, the whole sequence spanning almost three minutes, with Veedu varai uravu as the tonal backdrop.
Perceptions from such scenes are subjective and I can imagine some folks not liking it. Personally though, I feel these are very crafty scenes that force you – the viewer – to not just consume what's happening on the screen but, by the nature of the ordinariness of the sequence of shots, make you go into yourself and start thinking about the non-ordinariness of what just transpired in the movie. This is in some sense similar to the long-shots post-scene that makers like Spielberg employ where a scene is done but the camera stays on a close-up shot of a character (presumably in deep thought) subverting the viewer to actually do the same – think deeply about what's just happened or what's about to happen.
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Isn't it such a wholesome pleasure to watch such a fabulous collaboration of Tamil and Malayalam characters, in such a luxurious mix of Tamil and Malayalam dialogues? I am probably biased here: I got goosebumps just watching Ramesh Thilak share screenspace with Soubin in Kumbalangi Nights because, to me, that felt like a greater cinema acknowledging the talents of a Tamil actor often overlooked by Tamil cinema itself (hopefully, not so true anymore), so watching a whole village (no pun intended) of Tamil characters employed in a beautiful Malayalam film (I'm calling it that only because the main shakers and movers of the film are fellow Mallus) is a paradise.
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That the entire movie has as its backdrop not just a rural setting but the constant drone of old Tamil movie scenes and songs can be chalked up as a creative mixing technique, something oft-employed in a lot of movies but only for some scenes. But this film takes it several notches up: not only is the presence of these songs and scenes near-constant and near-throughout the film, but they are often outrageously spot-on and in-sync with the movie scene! I dont know better so I can only imagine that the director has an enviable encyclopedic knowledge of 50s-70s era of Tamil cinema.
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Literally just finished watching the elephant whisperers and they put on nanpakal nerathu mayakkam idk if I can be punched twice like that
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"to the god who awakened me from the tangled dreams. to the old advertisements that gave me the seed of thought. to the filmmakers that turned their messy lives into stories and characters."
#Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam#malayalam cinema#indian cinema#Lijo Jose Pellissery#Mammootty#malayalam movie#movies
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Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam (2023) ดุจดั่งฝันตอนกลางวัน
Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam (2023) ดุจดั่งฝันตอนกลางวัน Read the full article
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Netflixable? A Malayali man wakes up in a Tamil “Twilight Zone” — “Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam”
Nobody should watch the latest from Indian filmmaker Lijo Jose Pellissery without at least glancing over a review. The director of “Churuli” and “Angamaly Diaries” has a reputation for not playing by the rules, for not overexplaining or even explaining at all what he’s up to in his immersive, Malayalam-language “nonlinear” dramas and dramedies. “Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam” takes its sweet time…
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Malayalam cinema is enriched by actors and technicians turning producers
Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam, Lijo Jose Pellissery’s award-winning movie, has been produced by Mammootty and Lijo. It was featured in the New York Times list of top five international movies to watch. Thankam, streaming on Netflix, has been produced by scenarist and scriptwriter Syam Pushkaran, director-actor Dileesh Pothan and actor Fahadh Faasil under their, Bhavana Studios banner. Iratta,…
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#actors#fahad faazil producer#iratta producer joju george#Malayalam cinema#malayalam cinema actor turned producers#malayalam cinema producers#Mammootty#Manju Warrier#Mohanlal#nazriya nazim prdoucer#prithviraj#producers#technicians
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Five International Movies to Stream Now
‘Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam’ Stream it on Netflix. The new film by Lijo Jose Pellissery — the director of genre-bending gems like “Angamaly Diaries” and “Jallikattu” — is a quotidian slice of Kafka: a gentle, keenly observed comedy in which a man wakes up after some slumber not as a different creature, but simply as another man, with another name, family and memories. The curmudgeonly James…
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Netflixable? A Malayali man wakes up in a Tamil "Twilight Zone" -- "Nanapakal Nerathu Mayakkam"
Nobody should watch the latest from Indian filmmaker Lijo Jose Pellissery without at least glancing over a review. The director of “Churuli” and “Angamaly Diaries” has a reputation for not playing by the rules, for not overexplaining or even explaining at all what he’s up to in his immersive, Malayalam-language “nonlinear” dramas and dramedies. “Nanpakal Nerathu Mayakkam” takes its sweet time…
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