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Ott Malayalam Releases This Week Access

And just like that, the long week ended, and the endless Friday began again.

The story revolved around an aging Kathakali artist, Madhavan (played by the legendary Mammootty in a role that trade papers were calling "his most vulnerable in a decade"), who is diagnosed with rapid-onset Alzheimer’s. The film wasn't a tear-jerker; it was a haunting, slow-burn exploration of identity. Madhavan forgets his wife but remembers every single mudra (hand gesture) from his youth. He forgets his son’s name but can recite entire verses from the Ramayana in archaic Malayalam.

The main course arrived on Friday. had been teasing it for months: Pattabhishekam (The Coronation), a dark political action-thriller starring Fahadh Faasil and a returning-to-form Kunchacko Boban. ott malayalam releases this week

Meera had already watched the screener. “It’s not a movie,” she said, her voice low. “It’s an exorcism. There’s a ten-minute single shot where Madhavan applies his own chutti (makeup) while humming a forgotten raga. No dialogue. Just the sound of the brush and his breath. By the end, you feel like you’ve aged twenty years.”

As they paid the bill, Arun’s phone buzzed. A news alert: “Next week: Two new Malayalam OTT releases announced. One starring Tovino Thomas as a blind chef. Another a period drama about the first Malayalam dictionary.” And just like that, the long week ended,

This was the polar opposite of Ormakalude Tharattu . Where the first film was quiet and introspective, Pattabhishekam was loud, violent, and outrageously funny. The plot: Two rival political factions in a fictional North Kerala district fight over the inheritance of a defunct lottery ticket agency. Fahadh played a cynical, chain-smoking political secretary named Bhadran, while Kunchacko played a former child prodigy turned reluctant gangster named Sunny.

The duality of the week was now clear. The Malayali audience was being asked to toggle between two extremes of their identity. On one screen, they wept for a dying art form and a fading memory. On the other, they cheered for chaotic, bloody satire about their own political rot. Madhavan forgets his wife but remembers every single

Just as everyone thought the week was done, quietly dropped a third release on Saturday morning. No announcement. No trailer. Just a thumbnail that appeared: Gulf 2.0 – a documentary by debutante director Aamina Salim.