Inspired, the grandson rewrote his script. He kept the modern style but added real details: a mother preparing kanji (rice porridge) at midnight, a local katha prasangam (storytelling) competition, and a hero who, when angry, quotes a Prem Nazir song ironically.

Govindan Nair smiled. "Show me your script."

The grandson argued. But Govindan Nair switched on the projector and played a scene from the classic "Sandhesam" — where a Gulf-returned uncle tries to speak Arabic to his own mother. The whole grove laughed.

The film was a small hit — not because of the drone shots, but because a critic wrote: "This film breathes like a Kerala afternoon."

Then he played a scene from "Kumbalangi Nights" — where two brothers fight, then silently share a meal, because in Kerala, food is the first apology.

Malayalam cinema is not decoration on Kerala culture — it is the culture’s own memory, argument, and lullaby. If you remove Kerala from it, the cinema loses its pulse. If you remove the cinema, Kerala forgets how it laughs at itself.

That year, Govindan Nair’s coconut grove hosted the unofficial “Coconut Film Festival.” The rule was simple: every film shown had to teach something true about Kerala — its politics, its rains, its matrilineal ghosts, or its absurd, beautiful, slow-hearted soul.