This is a repository for open-source Magisk Modules which is run by by IzzyOnDroid (details), currently serving 139 modules. To add it to your MMRL client, use this URL:
https://apt.izzysoft.de/magisk
Note this repo is still in BETA stage, so there might be some glitches and not everything is working as planned yet! Further, other than with our F-Droid repo, there is no extensive scanning framework in place. Modules are taken in directly from their resp. developers.
Last updated: 2026-03-06 20:33 UTC
The magic of Malayalam cinema today—witnessed globally through the OTT revolution—is that it refuses to stay a museum piece. It is not a tourist’s brochure of Kathakali and Onam sadya. It is a gritty, hilarious, heartbreaking conversation between the past and the present.
Consider the iconic Sandhesam (1991), which satirized the regional chauvinism between the northern and southern districts of Kerala. It was hilarious not because of slapstick, but because every Malayali recognized the obsessive love for their native village and the subtle bigotry against the "other side of the river." Similarly, Perumthachan (The Master Carpenter, 1990) wove folklore and the caste dynamics of traditional Vishwakarma artisans into a tragic, cinematic poem. reshma hot mallu girl showing boobs target
This "mirroring" is seen in the smallest details: the sound of a coconut scraper in the morning, the rain lashing against a tiled roof, the distinct cadence of the Thirayattam ritual, or the political debates over a cup of chaya (tea) at a roadside thattukada (street-side shop). Malayalam cinema has never been afraid of silence, long takes, and the mundane—because in Kerala, the mundane is where culture breathes. Consider the iconic Sandhesam (1991), which satirized the
When a Malayali watches a film, they are not just seeing a story. They are seeing their grandmother’s kitchen, their uncle’s political fervor, the thiruvathira they danced as a child, and the modern anxiety of moving to a Gulf country. In return, the films give them the courage to question a tradition, laugh at a hypocrisy, or simply feel proud of the rain-soaked, fiercely literate little strip of land they call home. Malayalam cinema has never been afraid of silence,