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It tells the world that Kerala is not merely "God’s Own Country"—a tourist slogan. It is a land of radical politics and domestic abuse, of world-class education and grand corruption, of secular harmony and petty casteism, of heartbreaking beauty and mundane cruelty. By holding a mirror to this complexity without flinching, Malayalam cinema has transcended entertainment. It has become the living, breathing archive of the Keralite soul. To watch it is to understand that no backwater is ever as still as it looks, and no culture is ever as simple as its postcard.
Consider the Sadya (the vegetarian feast on a banana leaf). In Ustad Hotel (2012), the Sadya is a healing ritual that bridges Islam and Hinduism. In The Great Indian Kitchen (2021), the Sadya becomes a symbol of gendered enslavement—the men eat first while the women sweat over the fire, only to eat the leftovers. The act of cooking, boiling, and cleaning is the central metaphor of Malayalam cinema’s cultural critique. mallu cheating wife vaishnavi hot sex with boyf exclusive
Classics like Godfather (1991) used the returning Gulf uncle as a comedic relief. But modern films like Take Off (2017) and Virus show the brutal reality: the worker who is human trafficking fodder, the nurse in a war zone. Moothon (2019) starring Nivin Pauly, is a brutal journey from the idyllic Lakshadweep to the hellish brothels of Mumbai, tracing how the dream of the Gulf corrupts the purity of the Keralite islander. Malayalam cinema is currently experiencing its most respected era on the global stage (Netflix, Amazon, Mubi). Why? Because the world is hungry for authenticity. In an age of franchises and spectacle, the cinema of Kerala offers something radical: the truth about a specific place . It tells the world that Kerala is not
From the misty, high-range spice plantations of Kumbalangi Nights (2019) to the claustrophobic, waterlogged villages of Pariyerum Perumal (2018), the geography dictates the narrative. In Maheshinte Prathikaaram (2016), the sleepy, gossipy foothills of Idukky set the rhythm for a story about petty pride and small-town masculinity. The rain in Kerala—relentless, life-giving, and frustrating—is a trope so effective that films like June (2019) use it to signify romantic renewal, while Joseph (2019) uses it to wash away the grime of urban corruption. It has become the living, breathing archive of
This movement is a direct cinematic representation of Kerala’s sociological statistics: high suicide rates among the educated, the crisis of the Gulf migrant, the loneliness of high-density living in cities like Kochi, and the commodification of intimacy. 1983 (2014) uses cricket not as a sport, but as a metaphor for the Keralite father’s desperate need for his son to escape the fate of achedi (local clerk). Finally, no discussion of Kerala culture is complete without the Gulf diaspora. For fifty years, the "Gulf Malayali" has been the economic backbone of the state. Cinema has oscillated between glorifying the NRI and pitying him.
Similarly, the elephant. No other film culture fetishizes the pachyderm quite like Malayalam cinema. In Gajaraja Manthram (1997), the elephant is a god. In Jallikattu , the elephant is replaced by a rampaging bull, symbolizing the primal hunger that civilization (especially Keralite civilization) tries to suppress. The temple festival ( pooram ) is the ultimate climax of Keralite identity—chaos regulated by ritual, noise tolerated for the sake of tradition. Around 2010, a tectonic shift occurred. The "Meta Cinema" or "New Wave" erased the line between the hero and the common man. Directors like Dileesh Pothan, Rajeev Ravi, and Syam Pushkaran created a "Kerala of the Broken Middle Class."
However, the modern wave (2010s onward) has turned this cultural coexistence into a subject of deep analytical cinema. Maheshinte Prathikaaram subtly critiques the caste pride of the Ezhava community. Kumbalangi Nights deconstructs the toxic patriarchy within a Muslim household while celebrating its culinary art. Nayattu (2021) uses the backdrop of a police thriller to expose how upper-caste domination still manipulates the lower-caste body.
It tells the world that Kerala is not merely "God’s Own Country"—a tourist slogan. It is a land of radical politics and domestic abuse, of world-class education and grand corruption, of secular harmony and petty casteism, of heartbreaking beauty and mundane cruelty. By holding a mirror to this complexity without flinching, Malayalam cinema has transcended entertainment. It has become the living, breathing archive of the Keralite soul. To watch it is to understand that no backwater is ever as still as it looks, and no culture is ever as simple as its postcard.
Consider the Sadya (the vegetarian feast on a banana leaf). In Ustad Hotel (2012), the Sadya is a healing ritual that bridges Islam and Hinduism. In The Great Indian Kitchen (2021), the Sadya becomes a symbol of gendered enslavement—the men eat first while the women sweat over the fire, only to eat the leftovers. The act of cooking, boiling, and cleaning is the central metaphor of Malayalam cinema’s cultural critique.
Classics like Godfather (1991) used the returning Gulf uncle as a comedic relief. But modern films like Take Off (2017) and Virus show the brutal reality: the worker who is human trafficking fodder, the nurse in a war zone. Moothon (2019) starring Nivin Pauly, is a brutal journey from the idyllic Lakshadweep to the hellish brothels of Mumbai, tracing how the dream of the Gulf corrupts the purity of the Keralite islander. Malayalam cinema is currently experiencing its most respected era on the global stage (Netflix, Amazon, Mubi). Why? Because the world is hungry for authenticity. In an age of franchises and spectacle, the cinema of Kerala offers something radical: the truth about a specific place .
From the misty, high-range spice plantations of Kumbalangi Nights (2019) to the claustrophobic, waterlogged villages of Pariyerum Perumal (2018), the geography dictates the narrative. In Maheshinte Prathikaaram (2016), the sleepy, gossipy foothills of Idukky set the rhythm for a story about petty pride and small-town masculinity. The rain in Kerala—relentless, life-giving, and frustrating—is a trope so effective that films like June (2019) use it to signify romantic renewal, while Joseph (2019) uses it to wash away the grime of urban corruption.
This movement is a direct cinematic representation of Kerala’s sociological statistics: high suicide rates among the educated, the crisis of the Gulf migrant, the loneliness of high-density living in cities like Kochi, and the commodification of intimacy. 1983 (2014) uses cricket not as a sport, but as a metaphor for the Keralite father’s desperate need for his son to escape the fate of achedi (local clerk). Finally, no discussion of Kerala culture is complete without the Gulf diaspora. For fifty years, the "Gulf Malayali" has been the economic backbone of the state. Cinema has oscillated between glorifying the NRI and pitying him.
Similarly, the elephant. No other film culture fetishizes the pachyderm quite like Malayalam cinema. In Gajaraja Manthram (1997), the elephant is a god. In Jallikattu , the elephant is replaced by a rampaging bull, symbolizing the primal hunger that civilization (especially Keralite civilization) tries to suppress. The temple festival ( pooram ) is the ultimate climax of Keralite identity—chaos regulated by ritual, noise tolerated for the sake of tradition. Around 2010, a tectonic shift occurred. The "Meta Cinema" or "New Wave" erased the line between the hero and the common man. Directors like Dileesh Pothan, Rajeev Ravi, and Syam Pushkaran created a "Kerala of the Broken Middle Class."
However, the modern wave (2010s onward) has turned this cultural coexistence into a subject of deep analytical cinema. Maheshinte Prathikaaram subtly critiques the caste pride of the Ezhava community. Kumbalangi Nights deconstructs the toxic patriarchy within a Muslim household while celebrating its culinary art. Nayattu (2021) uses the backdrop of a police thriller to expose how upper-caste domination still manipulates the lower-caste body.
Tex Willer #89 – I due comandanti!
Argumento: Mauro Boselli
Roteiro: Mauro Boselli
Desenhos: Bruno Brindisi
Capa: Maurizio Dotti
Lançamento: 18 de Março de 2026
Onde se encontra Montales? O indescritível guerrilheiro, em luta contra os tiranos que oprimem o México, parece estar em todo o lado, à frente de seus valentes rebeldes. A verdade é que são dois deles, perfeitamente idênticos, com uma máscara preta no rosto, e um dos dois é um gringo que conhecemos. Apenas Steve Dickart, vulgo Mefisto, entendeu quem é o segundo comandante dos guerrilheiros… e um duelo de astúcia à distância começa entre ele e Tex.








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Design do cartaz: Gustavo Saint/DVL
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A Mythos Editora acabou de informar que Fabio Civitelli, um dos mais aclamados desenhadores de Tex, estará presente no Brasil, em Setembro, mais precisamente nos dias 11, 12 e 13 para participar em dois eventos.

Fabio Civitelli estará no Brasil, em Setembro, para participar de dois eventos em São Paulo, para gáudio dos seus fãs
Será a quarta presença do Mestre Fabio Civitelli (o mítico embaixador italiano de Tex Willer) no Brasil, depois das ilustres presenças em 2010 (Fest Comix 2010), 2011 (Gibicon nº 0) e 2012 (Fest Comix 2012 e Gibicon nº 1).
Este ano Fabio Civitelli vai participar num evento a realizar na própria Mythos Editora, na sexta-feira, dia 11, seguindo-se a presença no Gibi SP, Festival de Quadrinhos e Cultura Pop, no fim de semana de 12 e 13 de Setembro de 2026, no Bunkyo – Rua São Joaquim, 381, Liberdade, em São Paulo.

Dorival Vitor Lopes e Thiago Gardinali com os responsáveis do Gibi SP, Wilson Simonetto e esposa, numa reunião para definir o evento que contará com a presença de Fabio Civitelli
No evento sediado na Mythos Editora, na sexta-feira, 11 de Setembro, também estará presente o Mestre brasileiro Pedro Mauro, primeiro desenhador do Brasil a desenhar oficialmente Tex, que assim acompanhará Fabio Civitelli numa sessão de autógrafos e fotos com os fãs, Civitelli que soubemos foi novamente a primeira escolha do editor Dorival Vitor Lopes, que obviamente também estará presente em ambos os evento, assim como todos os grandes nomes relacionados à produção do Ranger, como por exemplo Júlio Schneider, Marcos e Dolores Maldonado, Paulo Guanaes e Thiago Gardinali, tal como o co-proprietário da Mythos, Helcio de Carvalho, para além de muitos dos grandes fãs e colecionadores brasileiros de Tex.
O editor Dorival também informou que a acompanhar Fabio Civitelli, virá de Portugal, José Carlos Francisco, o Zeca, que deste modo volta a acompanhar Civitelli ao Brasil, tal como aconteceu em 2010, quando também foram ambos convidados pelo editor Dorival Vitor Lopes.

Fabio Civitelli, José Carlos Francisco e Pedro Mauro vão reencontrar-se em Setembro, no Brasil
Em breve teremos mais informações sobre os dois eventos para disponibilizar a todos os nossos leitores. Estejam atentos e programem-se para em Setembro comparecerem em São Paulo para desfrutar da companhia e da Arte de Fabio Civitelli!
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