바카라Laughter promotes a bond and simultaneously draws a line바카라
바카라Konrad Lorenz, On Aggression
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If someone were to say that humÂour and comedy form an integral part of Malayali life, politics and culture, you may be prompted to ask, 바카라So what바카라s unique about that?바카라. Although a valid question, it would miss the sheer extent and nature of it that바카라s obvious to those who know it and can compare. Last week, comedÂian Indrans won the state바카라s best actor awardÂ. In 2010, Salim Kumar, another comedian, got the national award for best actor. That both of them won it, paradoxically, for tragic roles is not the only reason one can say that humÂour is serious business in Kerala.
Laughter, hilarious and liberating, oftenÂtimes cynical and dark, invariably emerges in all discourses and interactions바카라they come in umpteen forms: as parodies, double entendres, mimicry, cartooning, spoofing바카라Š. Kerala바카라s folk and classical arts, and visual, literary and oral traditions, are strewn with shining figures of humour. Traditional performance forms like Padayani, Mudiyettu, Chavittunatakam, Porattu natakam and Kurathiyattam have comedy and comic characters at the centre, as is the case with 바카라classical바카라 elite-caste temple arts like Koothu and Ottanthullal. The SansÂkrit theatre Koodiyattam has the mercurial vidushaka, who accompanies the hero in all his journeys and advÂentures. While on stage, the ChakÂyars, as vidushaka, had the artistic liceÂnce to make fun of even the kings, nobles and priests. Malayalam literature has produced some of the most versatile and acerbic of satirists바카라Kunchan Nambiar, Sanjayan, Vaikom Muhammed Basheer, E.V. KriÂshna Pillai and VKN. No wonder the most acclaimed Indian cartoonists like Sankar, Kutty, Abu Abraham, O.V. VijaÂyan and E.P. Unny are Malayalis. In Malayalam television, the most popular programme is the daily capsule of political-cartooning that spoof and pillory politicians through a montage of film clips, music and news footage, peppered with cryptic comments of the presenter (virtually a contemporary avatar of the Chakyar of yore). Malayalam cinema is no exception. Comedians like Adoor Bhasi, Bahadoor, S.P. Pillai, KuthiravatÂtom Pappu, Mala Aravindan, Jagathy Sreekumar, Innocent, Sreenivasan, PhiÂlomena and Kalpana enrich its narrative universe with their varied personas. Comic styles in Malayalam cinema draw from several roots and lineages: the comic figures of ritual performances, the Tamilian buffoon, the clown of the Victorian and Marathi theatre, and the vidushaka of Sanskrit theatre.
In the 바카라socials바카라 of 1950s and 바카라60s, humÂour doubled up as social criticism, especially in its representations of the rich, the savarnas and the landlords as degenerate vestiges of the past. In ways, comedy stood for modernity and rationalism: the practitioners of pre-modern medicine appeared as quacks, the culture of superstition was consistently made fun of. But there was also ambivalence about modernity, evident in the comic represÂentations of the 바카라modern바카라, and westernised men and women. You find an array of modish characters who evoke laughter: the hippie, the city-returned who flaunt chic ways, the Ladies Club members. They stood in comic relief against the accepted normalcy and norms of Malayali life and concerns, which were predominantly that of the savarna caste, urban, educated, middle-class male.


Mohanlal, Sreenivasan
Sidekick To Hero
That the often richly ambiguous device of comedy바카라subverting at one level and affirming at another바카라offered manifold uses to Kerala cinema is evident from the way it progressed. Traditional functions dominated at first. The vidushaka바카라companion to the dhirodatta nayaka (chivalrous hero)바카라was a convex mirror reflecting the hero but in a funny, perverted way. Valour, courage, pride, dexterity, intelligence and physical prowess were befitting and 바카라natural바카라 only to the heroes. The sidekick is devoid of all these; he is a coward, a glutton, a dimwit and someone who thinks with his stomach. Till the 바카라70s, such vidushaka-companions to the hero were a ubiquitous presence. Actors like Bhasi, S.P. Pillai and Bahadur played it ad nauseam, creating idioms of their own, but drawing selectively from global and national cinemas while staying rooted in local performative traditions. If the hero was a police inspector, his companion was a constable (Prem Nazir and Bhasi have played this duo in many films). If the narrative is centred round the family, the sidekick was the cook, servant or butler in the house, and outside, the less intelligent classmate in college, the eteÂrnal second fiddle. One can find vestiges of this in recent decades too, with actors like Mukesh, Jagadeesh, Innocent, JagÂathy and Kalabhavan Mani offering the contrast to hero-actors like Mammootty, Mohanlal, Suresh Gopi and Jayaram.
 Why do these tropes endure? Because the function does. The social, physical and intellectual inferiority of the sidekick is something resonating with caste/community connotations, especially in the case of dark-skinned actors like Mani, Salim Kumar and Harishree AsoÂkan. Sreenivasan is someone who has a very curious comic place. An accompliÂshed actor, scriptwriter and director, his films and characters have consistenÂtly played with uneasy questions about 바카라progressive바카라 pretensions of the Malayali middle class. (바카라Don바카라t ask caste, don바카라t tell caste, but never do anything forgetting your caste,바카라 said Ayyappapanicker the poet, paraphrasing the great social refÂormer and saint Sri Narayana Guru). In film after film, he enacted and comically elaborated the various devious means through which a dark-skinned 바카라low-caste바카라 man had to negotiate the invisible caste maze that Kerala society is.


(Clockwise from left) Jagathy Sreekumar, Kalpana, Philomena, Innocent, KalaÂbhavan Mani
By the late 바카라90s, the dividing lines betÂween hero and sidekick had become thin or irrelevant. In many films, one finds the sidekick competing with the hero. For instance, Mohanlal and Sreenivasan in Sanmanassullavarkku Samadhanam, Akkare, Akkare, Akkare or Nadodikkattu, Mohanlal and Jagathy in Yoddha and Kilukkam, Mohanlal and Mukesh right from Boeing, Boeing to Kakkakuyil and Vismayathumbathu, or Mammootty and Mukesh in Chronic Bachelor. In all these films, one finds the sidekick equalling or sometimes even outsmarting the hero in his space and game.
Identity Politics?
In the 바카라80s, impersonation emerged as a major trope in Malayalam cinema with the central character/s impersonating someone else out of necessity, by accident or to usurp or access privilege; in a way they play characters who are not or cannot be themselves. Impersonation becomes a means of escape from oneself, a refuge or a survival strategy, and the factors that force them to don such roles are essentially economic, sometimes socÂial. Many box-office hits of the 바카라90s have an impersonator for its hero or heroine posing as a husband, wife, daughter or a rich heir (Chandralekha, Meleparambile Aanveedu, Chitram, His Highness Abdulla, Kilukkam...). Maybe the inability to be what one wants and ought to be creates the vacuum within the hero-persona that is filled by impersonation. One can never be, one can only pose to be바카라that was the message of these comedies. Strikingly, this 바카라split personality바카라 is something elemental to comedy also. This disjunction between being and posture, one바카라s real identity and potential incarnations, give rise to a situation where the hero is liberated from his moral weight and baggage, his role-liabilities. To survive, he could and will pose as anyone. This theme was expÂerimented with in a big way by Priyadarsan in the mid-바카라80s (PoochakÂkoru Mookkutthi, Boeing Boeing) and taken to its extremes in Kakkakuyil (2001), where even the body and voice of the hero are split into the bodies of two characters, played by Mohanlal and Mukesh. In a similar vein, in the Sathyan Anthikkad film Gandhinagar II Street (1986), Mohanlal becomes a Gorkha to get a job. In Sibi Malayil바카라s His Highness Abdulla (1990), he is a professional killer from Bombay who gains his way into the palace to assassinate the king posing as a Brahmin. In Malappuram Haji MahanÂaya Joji (1994), Mukesh impersonates a Muslim to get a schoolÂteacher바카라s job. In Doore Doore Oru Koodu Koottam (1986), Mohanlal poses as a graduate for it. The sheer number of times this self/other duality plays out, comically and with dark implications, is a revelation.


Fahad Fazil in Maheshinte Prathikaram (2016)
Laughing About Today
Recent decades witnessed a huge shift in the tone and tenor, narrative terrains and modes. With the dominance of superstars coming to an end, there was both a vacuum and a sense of lightness in the air. Many young filmmakers, actors and technicians entÂered the field exploring new modes and styles of narration. This radical shift is what enabled many erstwhile comedians like Indrans, Salim Kumar and Suraj Venjaramoodu to prove their acting talent in serious roles바카라which could happen in the past with avant-gardists like John Abraham casting Bhasi as a ChristÂian feudal lord, and evoking some holy terror, in Cheriyachante Kroora KriÂthyangal (state best actor award, 1979).


Indrans and Salim Kumar, who are state and national award winners respectively
The new crop of heroes (Jayasoorya, Dulquer Salman, Fahad Fazil, Nivin Pauly) possess verbal and behavioural articulations that are earthy and everyday. Conscious of belonging to a 바카라post-superstar바카라 era, the new films often have funny, even snide references to the superstars. With heroes cut to human size, the role of sidekicks becÂomes more or less redundant. ContempÂorary humour draws more from the pressures, follies and foibles of immediate surroundings, the grind of everyday life, than personality quirks or slapstick. Take Maheshinte Prathikaram (2016) by Dilish Pothen, Aadu Oru BheekÂara Jeeviyanu (2015/Midhun Manuel Thomas), Action Hero Biju (2016/Abrid Shine) or Oru Vadakkan Selfie (2015/Prajith). In Ozhivudivasathe Kali (SanalÂkumar Sasidharan/2015), Karie (ShanaÂvas Nuranipuzha/2014) and Kanyaka Talkies (K.R. Manoj/2013), the humour has dark hues, diabolic dimensions. The laughter is getting more cynical in television cartoons too바카라reflecting the same sense of darkness, of a post-truth world where any belÂief in political action, or trust in movements and leaders is non-existent. Yet, in this age, comedy is our only refuge, because it바카라s about survival and overcoming; it is the ability to look at self and the Other not as opposites but as an essential continuum.
(The writer is a film scholar and documentary-maker.)