
Interview | ‘Maranamass’ director Sivaprasad: The film is told from an experimental, quirky perspective
The Hindu
Maranamass is a cleverly written, witty film with quirky characters and exaggerated situations, now streaming on SonyLiv.
Maranamass is chaotically funny with its motley crew of characters and over-the-top exaggerated situations, co-written by debutant director Sivaprasad and actor Siju Sunny. The movie is cleverly written, witty and funny without once crossing the line into slapstick territory. Sivaprasad is known for his brand of quirky TVCs, especially the promo featuring actor Shakeela for the Netflix series, Sex Education. Headlined by Basil Joseph, and starring Suresh Krishna, Prashant Alexander, and Siju Sunny, the film recently dropped on SonyLiv. Here he talks about making the film, creating the characters and his plans.
We have known each other for a long time and we have worked together. We talk about stories and scripts, this one was born out of a core idea suggested by Siju. I liked the basic idea and felt that it could be developed into a one line for the script and a movie, of course.
No, not that. But what happens when a girl uses pepper spray against a man who harasses her in a bus and ends up killing him with it. We populated it with a bunch of ‘characters’ with their own back stories and created situations around them.
Everything is in the script — the situations and the dialogues. But then the actors have improvised on the set, bringing in their individual flavour.
I cannot say we had a particular actor in mind; casting was not fixed initially. Rajesh Madhavan was the only actor who we had decided upon earlier. We explored our options and decided on the actors afterwards. I am very interested in the casting aspect, I did the casting for Minnal Murali; I was assistant director for the film. Casting actors is an interesting process for I believe if you get it [casting] right then half the work is done. The faces of the actors have to fit the characters, support it and if people can connect both then it is perfect. For example Babu Antony had to essay the character of Deputy Superintendent of Police, Ajay Ramachandran. Nobody else would have been able to pull it off, especially not a comedian. I have worked with Basil, Rajesh [Madhavan] is a friend and I have also worked with him.
We worked on the look of all the characters, we wanted Basil’s to be very different from how we have seen him. So it is a bit of Gen Z, cross references with other films etc…because the genre of the film is such that we wanted the look to have a caricature-like, over-the-top look which is different.
(Laughs) It was literally a 4am thought! Once the one line was ready, for some reason I thought of Tovino. He has a great sense of humour, for one. It was, perhaps, why I thought of him. I thought ‘maybe he has plans to produce a film’. I texted him, he said he would get back to me…he liked what he read and he was in. Everything happened very quickly.













