Forbidden spectacles of a bygone era: an analysis of Malayalam cinema’s soft-porn noon-show culture
Faculty Advisor
Date
2024
Keywords
film theatres, Kerala film culture, obscenity, Shakeela, Silk Smitha, suburban audience, voyeurism
Abstract (summary)
The cultural paradigms of the soft-porn era in Malayalam cinema had an emancipatory quality where the sensationalized body of the ‘bombshell’ starlets captivated the voyeuristic perceptions of regional spectators.* The celebration of these films by a suburban audience constructed a new public space for the realization of carnal desires and taboo fantasies. This article investigates how the soft-porn noon-shows contributed to a unique cultural experience of film-viewing in Kerala in the late 1990s that challenged the cultural elitism associated with regional cinema. It investigates the role of the audience in defining the historical significance of the noon-show theatres, together with their origin, popularity and fall in the larger narrative of the evolutionary metamorphosis of Malayalam cinema. The softcore phenomenon was an organic subversion of the hegemonic ideology of cinema, which has been used by upper-class cultural powers to maintain their moral presuppositions.
Publication Information
Raj, S. J., & Suresh, A. K. (2024). Forbidden spectacles of a bygone era: An analysis of Malayalam cinema’s soft-porn noon-show culture. Studies in South Asian Film & Media, 16(2), 221–239. https://doi.org/10.1386/safm_00091_1
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