New Delhi Chronicle Entertainment Bureau
Thiruvananthapuram | 20 December
A Tribute to the Man Who Made Us Laugh, Think and Feel
The Malayalam film fraternity and audiences across India are in profound mourning today as veteran actor, screenwriter, director and filmmaker Sreenivasan passed away at the age of 69 following a prolonged battle with health complications. His death marks the end of an era for Indian cinema — one of its most gifted storytellers whose work shaped the moral, cultural and emotional landscape of Malayalam films for nearly five decades.
Born in Pattiam in Kerala’s Kannur district, Sreenivasan’s journey from an economics graduate to one of Malayalam cinema’s most influential creative minds was marked by insight, courage and originality. Over a remarkable career spanning close to fifty years, he contributed to more than 225 films, seamlessly balancing acting, screenwriting and direction. His deep understanding of ordinary lives made his stories universally relatable.
As a screenwriter, Sreenivasan gave Malayalam cinema some of its most enduring classics. His scripts were sharp yet compassionate, humorous yet politically and socially alert. Films such as Odaruthammava Aalariyam, Sandesam, Nadodikkattu, Udayananu Tharam and Njan Prakashan continue to resonate with audiences for their biting satire, realism and relevance across generations.
As a filmmaker, he demonstrated rare sensitivity and honesty. His directorial works, including Vadakkunokkiyanthram and Chinthavishtayaya Shyamala, explored masculinity, insecurity, morality and middle-class anxieties with warmth and restraint. His contributions earned him several honours, including National and Kerala State Film Awards, cementing his place among the greats of Indian cinema.
What truly set Sreenivasan apart was his ability to make people laugh while compelling them to reflect. Through everyday characters and deceptively simple narratives, he held up a mirror to society — exposing hypocrisy, political opportunism and social contradictions without bitterness, but with unmistakable clarity.
Beyond cinema, Sreenivasan was admired as a thinker and a public intellectual who never shied away from expressing his views. He is survived by his sons, actors Vineeth and Dhyan Sreenivasan, who carry forward his creative legacy in contemporary Malayalam cinema.
Tributes have poured in from across the film industry, reflecting the immense respect he commanded as a writer of conscience and an artist of integrity. His absence leaves a void that is difficult to fill, but his characters, dialogues and ideas will continue to live on — on screens and in public memory.
Sreenivasan did not merely entertain; he educated, questioned and awakened. In a time when cinema often chases spectacle, his body of work stands as a reminder that storytelling rooted in truth, humour and humanity never fades.
Malayalam cinema has lost its sharpest pen and one of its kindest observers.
May his soul rest in peace.
— New Delhi Chronicle Entertainment Bureau
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