The Spectral Duration of Malayalam Soft-porn: Disappearance, Desire, and Haunting

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Mini, Darshana Sreedhar
In: BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies, 7, 2016, 2, p. 127-150
published:
SAGE Publications
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 127-150
ISSN: 0974-9276
0976-352X
DOI: 10.1177/0974927616667971
published in: BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies
Language: English
Subjects:
Collection: SAGE Publications (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>This paper examines the spectral nature of the genre of Malayalam soft-porn that emerged in the late 1980s but has now disappeared with rapid changes in the industry. I argue that the memory of soft-porn bleeds into the present, as if in an attempt to negotiate retroactively with the end of the celluloid era and to recoup the memory of the form that has been pronounced dead and gone by the end of 2000s. By examining the modes through which cinematic memory carries the charge of the immanent past into the contemporary moment both in terms of narrative strategies and the physical space of the cinema, I look at S.P. Theater in Trivandrum, the film Kanyaka Talkies and the installation Kuliyum Mattu Scenukalum by Priyaranjan Lal, all of which reflect the form of soft-porn as remnants of the past that haunt the present in significant ways. S.P. Theater, located in the outskirts of the city of Trivandrum, insistently maintained its status as a popular destination for soft-porn aficionados even after the form had fizzled out in the industry. On the other hand, the film Kanyaka Talkies traces the life of a fictional soft-porn theater that was converted to a Church. One of the crucial moments in the film features the installations that would later become part of Lal’s Kuliyum Mattu Scenukalum to reflect the inner contradictions in the built space of the Church/Theater. Between the fictional rendering of the soft-porn theater in the film, and its “real” variant in the form of S.P. Theater, I argue that the current cinema-scape is marked by a lingering ghostly presence of a recently deceased film form.</jats:p>