A low-budget intellectual bomb that is still playing in select Kochi screens. Nirvaaham tackles the bootstrap paradox in a uniquely Malayali setting. A software engineer in Technopark invents a device that lets him send text messages 10 seconds into the past. He uses it to win arguments with his wife and fix bugs in his code. But when a 10-second gap becomes a 10-year gap, he finds out he is the reason his father disappeared in 2016.
This isn't your typical "aliens attack" story. Gaganyaan follows a team of ISRO-trained astronauts from Thiruvananthapuram who lose communication with Earth during a routine mission. What follows is a claustrophobic masterpiece.
Whether it is the hard physics of Gaganyaan or the surrealist horror of Jalam 2142 , these released shows prove that the future of Indian cinema isn't Bollywood or Kollywood—it's the intelligent, rebellious cinema coming out of God's Own Country. released shows malayalam sci-fi 2026
Why you should watch it: Imagine Mad Max: Fury Road but shot on the backwaters of Alappuzha with Theyyam rituals performed on floating garbage barges. It is loud, wet, and visually unhinged. Fahadh Faasil delivers a career-best performance as a man who is slowly turning into a amphibian-like mutant due to radiation. Director: Christo Tomy Status: Released (February 2026)
Why you should watch it: Rajeev Ravi ditches laser guns for psychological horror. The film uses actual zero-gravity simulation tech and features a haunting score by Sushin Shyam . Critics are calling it "Gravity meets Ettuthikkum Madhayaanai." The twist ending regarding the "signal" they receive from the deep dark has sparked a million Reddit theories. Director: Lijo Jose Pellissery Status: Released (January 2026 - OTT) A low-budget intellectual bomb that is still playing
Why you should watch it: It is the most emotional sci-fi film of the year. It explores parenthood and alienation without a single monster. (Well, except for the mother-in-law, but that’s realistic fiction). Gone are the days when "Malayalam sci-fi" meant a rubber mask and a cheap green screen. The films of 2026 are leveraging the state's high literacy rate to tell smart, complex stories. The audience isn't just tolerating the science; they are demanding it.
Anjali Menon enters the genre space with a "soft sci-fi" family drama. The premise is deceptively simple: One morning, every child under the age of 12 in Kerala wakes up speaking a language no one has ever heard. Linguists call it "static code"; the Vatican calls it a miracle; the parents just want to know what their kids are saying about them. He uses it to win arguments with his
For decades, Malayalam cinema was celebrated for its realism—the sweat on a fisherman’s brow, the politics of a local chaya kada (tea shop). But something shifted in the mid-2020s. Filmmakers stopped looking just at the ground; they started looking at the sky.