Myriad Aspects in Ee-Ma-Yove

The paper focuses on the core idea presented in the movie – death, human psychology, and narrative styles. It also proves that spicy elements are not always necessary while dealing with gloomy themes. The paper defines how the film depicts the common man’s life adding their own stylisation to it, which interests the average malayali viewers who have been long saturated with the unrealistic story lines, melodramatic scenes and malechauvinistic punch dialogues. It also deals with grief and asks a questionhow you say goodbye to someone so close to you after his or her death.


Research Article
beings to frame a normal death as a murder is depicted in the scene. Normally ego and detective instant is not associated with a priest. But here the priest is a person who thinks himself a Sherlock Holmes. Interestingly, the police officer is more compassionate than the priest. Chaura whom Vavachan Mesthiri mishandled tries to take vengeance by strengthening the rumour by adding their own points. A band is invited to play at the funeral, but when the situation become worse they are insulted as if they were doing something wrong. Typical Keralite culture is highlighted through minute actions and dialogues. When Eeshi asks his wife her gold chain to mortgage for funds, irrespective of the situation, she is worried about the shame that she has to face when her family visits for the funeral. Zabeth is more concerned about her looks irrespective of the situation. We can see her borrowing a chain from a neighbour claiming that her relatives will note her bare neck. Anyway she will be at the spot light of the funeral and not her neighbour. Nise's lover utilises her grief to satisfy his lust. Vavachan's wife Pennamma is very apt as a widow who has the ability to start and stop crying as the situation demands. And it also makes the scene funny too when Pennamma howls her heart out and cleverly slips in comments about their life together and about others indirectly. Pennamma pokes at a dowry's story in the midst of a tragedy when Zabeth's parents arrived there. We could also see her crying in a musical tone which appears to be comical. The business mentality of the coffin maker is also notable. He tries to gain profit despite the tragic situation Eeshi faces. Ironically, when the coffin collapses, people blame Eeshi for not buying a good quality coffin for his father. The tendency of common people to imitate the rich people's luxurious marriage or death using all their life's savings to show their pride before others gives a wrong message to the society. They all want to do something more than what their neighbours did. For that they are even ready to give up all their savings or to get into debts. In this film too we can see Eeshi promises his father a grand funeral despite the fact that he himself know that he is economically low. In order to accomplish his father's wish of a grand funeral, he sacrifices all that he has and also gets into debt.

Theory
Realism: It is a complete realistic film which portrays a negative theme out of the usual kind. The characters, dialogues, behaviour and all are true to the coastal background they belong. People treat a death in various phases. The reactions of people to the death is realistic to the core. The common practises in a house where the death has occurred is represented as it is in real life. To make it more clear, procedures like consoling dear ones, serving beverages, arrangements for the funeral, printing cards, informing relatives and making arrangements for the burial, and all such incidents are presented with that realistic touch. One could feel the emotions of the people and the ambience of that house.
Surrealism: Surrealism in literature can be defined as an artistic attempt to bridge together reality and the imagination. The closing portions are a sigh against futility of the things that we do while we are alive. Because at the end, everyone is equal-the person who goes into the grave, and the person who digs the grave, the skilled one who built an altar with a single price of wood and the unskilled grave digger who shovels out sand and makes a hole, the bird that meant a little more than a meal and the dog that was a faithful companion. Pellissery gets it right from the very beginning, from the dreamy title sequence that enters and exits the screen like a surreal metaphor.
Magical realism: Instances of magical realism are presented in this film through two anonymous characters. The scene is shifted to these characters at crucial junctures where they renders dialogues which are highly metaphorical. The two characters are seen from the beginning till the end as playing cards. Dialogues rendered by these characters appears to be inappropriate, but it has symbolic meaning. These dialogues are conversed by the two anonymous characters:-Man 1: "everything has gotten mixed up." Man 2: "let it be." Man 1: "yes, let it be. First it get mixed up, then it will get clean, then it will get mixed up,all over again." Man 2: "true".
It points to the problems arising in the funeral house and its aftereffects and how it will end. Surprisingly, the two characters stop their card playing when all the four were dead. The ultimate scene in which we could see the dead ones-Vavachan Mesthiri, grave digger, duck, and the dog with the two anonymous characters, one wearing a black dress and the other, a white one. And there we could see two boats approaching them. People in white dress in one boat and black in another boat. It symbolically represents heaven and hell. White for heaven and black for hell.

Research Article
Conclusion: Ee-Ma-Yove is best noted for its stark realism. There are no extravagant settings in this film. He did it in such a way that audience will merge with the story for the whole time. Normally directors resort to spicy elements when dealing with gloomy themes. But Lijo Jose Pellissery does not go behind these artificialities. Instead, he sticks on to the central theme and pays full justice to it. One would feel that they are attending the funeral while watching the movie. The characters, dialogues and the behaviour are realistic to the core and all are true to the coastal background they belong. The director is successful in presenting the true essence of human life. He delves deeper into the consciences of people and portrays the reactions of people to the demise realistically. It can be concluded that Ee-Ma-Yove is partly a meditation on life and partly a comedy or grief, but it wholly and unambiguously is a film about death.