The cult Malayalam classic ‘Amma Ariyan’ was showcased in the Cannes Classics section at the Cannes Film Festival in France in a newly restored 4K version by the Film Heritage Foundation. Originally released in 1986, the 115-minute-long film is widely considered one of the most radical works in Indian cinema.
According to a PTI report yesterday, which dwelt on the restoration work, the film was directed by the late John Abraham, known for his politically driven and unconventional storytelling, and was his final film before his death in 1987.
The screening took place on Saturday (May 16) at the festival held in Cannes on the French Riviera in southern France, and it was the only Indian title featured in the Classics section.
Produced by the Odessa Collective — a group of film enthusiasts co-founded by Abraham — the film is set against the political unrest of 1970s Kerala. It follows Purushan, who sets out to inform a mother about her son’s death, gradually gathering companions on a journey that becomes both personal and political.
The film’s 4K restoration, which began in 2023, faced significant challenges due to the lack of quality source material, with only a poor online copy initially available.
After locating surviving members of the Odessa Collective and securing their permission, a global search through the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) yielded just two 35mm prints at the National Film Archive of India — subtitled and unsubtitled.
No original camera negative had survived, and the prints, accessed in 2024, showed significant deterioration, including scratches, broken splices and emulsion damage. After initial conservation work in India, restoration was carried out at L’Immagine Ritrovata (Bologna) and Digital Film Restore Pvt. Ltd.
The unsubtitled print served as the primary source, with the subtitled version used to fill gaps. The restoration required extensive manual work, particularly in sound, with over 4,000 interventions to address noise, dropouts and inconsistencies. Work-in-progress was closely supervised by Venu and Bina Paul to ensure fidelity to the film’s original aesthetic, the foundation said.
Film Heritage Foundation’s previous restorations, such as ‘Thamp’ (Aravindan Govindan), ‘Ishanou’ (Aribam Syam Sharma), ‘Manthan’ (Shyam Benegal), ‘Aranyer Din Ratri’ (Satyajit Ray), and ‘Gehenu Lamai’ (Sumitra Peries), have all had red carpet world premieres at Cannes between 2022 and 2025.
Meanwhile, according to Manon Sabrier, who wrote about the restoration on the festival’s official website, this is precisely what makes its screening at Cannes Classics so significant today.
“‘Amma Ariyan’ is finally getting the international recognition that it never really received when it was released. It is a film that continues to resonate because of its formal modernity and its portrayal of a youth in crisis.
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