Malayalam Film [2021] | First
Today, no print of Vigathakumaran survives. It is a lost film. But its absence is more powerful than any surviving reel. It stands as a silent monument to both artistic courage and social bigotry. It is a reminder that the first story Malayalam cinema ever told was not about gods or kings, but about a lost child searching for home in a world built on walls of caste.
In 2013, the Government of India finally recognized J. C. Daniel as the "Father of Malayalam Cinema." The J. C. Daniel Award is now the highest honor for lifetime achievement in Malayalam film. And P. K. Rosy, the forgotten actress, was posthumously honored as the first heroine of Malayalam cinema. first malayalam film
His ambition was audacious: to write, produce, direct, edit, and distribute the film himself. Vigathakumaran was not a mythological epic, the safe choice of the era. Instead, it was a poignant social drama. The plot followed a wealthy young man from a noble family who is separated from his parents in childhood (hence, "The Lost Child"). He is rescued and raised by a lower-caste family. The film traced his journey as he navigates the chasms of caste, class, and identity, eventually reuniting with his biological parents only to face the tragic question of where he truly belongs. Today, no print of Vigathakumaran survives