Porinju Mariam Jose Review __hot__ May 2026
Introduction Malayalam cinema has often romanticized the Syrian Christian tharavadu (ancestral home) as a space of feudal grace, pickles, and lace curtains. However, director Joshiy’s Porinju Mariam Jose (PMJ) shatters this veneer. Set in the fictional town of Vattanam in the 1980s and 1990s, the film is a brutal, operatic saga of caste pride, religious identity, and blood vengeance. Starring Joju George as Porinju, Nyla Usha as Mariam, and Chemban Vinod Jose as Jose, the film dissects the fragile ecosystem of three Christian sub-sects: the wealthy Catholics, the land-owning Jacobites (Porinju’s group), and the converted Latin Catholics (Jose’s group).
The narrative is framed as a flashback from a prison cell. Porinju, a hot-headed Jacobite, returns from the Gulf to find his village divided by a new church wall built by his rival, Jose (alias Karimpara). The conflict escalates from a stolen pig to a kidnapped bride (Mariam) to a full-scale massacre. The film meticulously builds towards a night of terror where Jose’s faction attacks Porinju’s wedding, leading to a devastating body count. The third act shifts to a revenge thriller, culminating in a public spectacle of beheading—a rare sight in mainstream Indian cinema. porinju mariam jose review


