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Mohanlal and Prithviraj Sukumaran discuss the fine line between action and storytelling, and why violence must have purpose in cinema.
Mohanlal and Prithviraj Sukumaran, two of Malayalam cinema’s biggest stars, recently shared their thoughts on action and violence in film during a conversation with The Hollywood Reporter India. Their discussion highlighted the importance of context in action-heavy narratives, especially as films continue to push the boundaries of brutality on screen.
Mohanlal begins by explaining that it’s not about the violence, but more about the situation. “If the situation demands that kind of bloodshed, then it is fine.”
“Very true,” agrees Prithviraj. “But I disagree with people having a problem with a film like Marco (2024), because it never pretended to be anything else.” He continues, “Unni [Mukundan] is a friend. From the time they set about making the film, the first announcement itself was about violence.” "Violence upon violence", “a slasher film on steroids”, as he calls it.
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Prithviraj adds that Marco was deemed to be the most violent film when it was promoted. “And then you watch it and complain about the violence?" he asked with a laugh.
Prithviraj explained, "You need to contextualise your action and violence. You can’t think of a particular action sequence and then write your screenplay to that. The action sequence has to organically come within a screenplay."
He continues by saying that when it comes to mainstream, big ticket 'masala' action films, there's a perception among the audience of it being very easy to make, but it's not. "One of the toughest things to do is to get people to organically have goosebumps," he says.
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The filmmaker-actor adds, "There is a lot of violence in L2: Empuraan (2025). It is not all butterflies and rose petals. But there is not a single sequence where I have indulged the filmmaker in me to be shooting violence; I’m just following a narrative."
And in his opinion, that's the secret of making a hit action film; a clear narrative that grounds the action sequences.