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Malayali Audiences Empower Bold, Content-Driven Malayalam Cinema to Thrive

Summary

  • Prithviraj Sukumaran praises Malayalam cinema's transformative year
  • Audiences prioritize storytelling over star status, embracing films like 'Manjummel Boys' and 'Lokah'
  • Prithviraj highlights how Malayalam viewers enable courageous filmmaking
Malayali Audiences Empower Bold, Content-Driven Malayalam Cinema to Thrive

As Prithviraj Sukumaran gears up for his upcoming release Vilayath Buddha on November 21, the actor has showered praise on Malayalam cinema's audience for shaping one of the industry's strongest years. In a candid conversation with Asianet News, the superstar expressed deep gratitude to the Malayali audiences for consistently uplifting films that are driven by strong themes rather than stardom.

Prithviraj noted that 2025 has been a rewarding year for Malayalam cinema, largely because the audience embraced non-star projects such as 'Manjummel Boys' and 'Lokah'. He stressed that Malayalam viewers evaluate films based on conviction and execution, not on star power. "If you trust the subject and invest in it properly, it doesn't matter who acts in it... audiences will embrace it. Our industry guarantees that now," he said.

Prithviraj also highlighted Lokah as a prime example of courageous filmmaking backed by audience trust. "For a female-led film like Lokah, it's Dulquer Salmaan's vision that made it happen. Hats off to that. But that vision is rooted in the faith we place in Malayalam audiences," he added, noting that such a film might not have been attempted in many other industries.

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Prithviraj Sukumaran says the Malayali audience has embraced non-star projects like 'Manjummel Boys' and 'Lokah', prioritizing storytelling over star status, and enabling bold, content-driven cinema to thrive.
Prithviraj says the Malayali audience has raised him and has every right to criticize him. He is deeply grateful to the Malayali audience for consistently uplifting films driven by strong themes rather than stardom.
Prithviraj cites the example of the female-led film 'Lokah', saying Dulquer Salmaan's vision for the film was rooted in the faith placed in Malayalam audiences, who have enabled such bold, content-driven cinema to thrive.

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