The first month of 2026 has come to an end, and for the Malayalam film industry (Mollywood), it was a month of harsh lessons. We saw a massive rush at the theaters with 19 movies released in just 31 days. But the result? A shocking number of flops and only two real winners.
While fans celebrated the massive success of Chatha Pacha, big stars like Nivin Pauly and Biju Menon faced unexpected failures. Is the audience changing? Are they waiting for OTT?
Here is the complete research, box office collection report, and analysis of January 2026.
January 2026: The Box Office Report Card
The numbers are alarming. Out of the 19 films that hit the screens, the majority washed out without a trace.
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Total Releases: 19 Movies
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Super Hit: 1 (Chatha Pacha: The Ring of Rowdies)
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Hit: 1 (Prakambanam)
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Flops / Disasters: 17 Movies
The Reality: The success rate for January 2026 is just 10%. Most movies struggled to even cross the ₹1 Crore mark.
Comparison: January 2025 vs. January 2026
Is this year starting better or worse than last year? Let’s compare the data.
| Feature | January 2025 | January 2026 |
| Top Winner | Rekhachithram (Blockbuster – ₹57 Cr) | Chatha Pacha (Super Hit – ₹33 Cr+) |
| Big Star Failures | Dominic and the Ladies’ Purse (Mammootty) & Identity (Tovino – Average/Flop) | Baby Girl (Nivin Pauly) & Valathu Vashathe Kallan (Biju Menon) |
| Total Hits | 1 Major Hit | 2 Hits (Chatha Pacha & Prakambanam) |
| Trend | Emotional Drama won the box office. | Mass Action & Comedy won the box office. |
Verdict: 2025 had a bigger solo hit (Rekhachithram), but 2026 showed that even small films like Prakambanam can survive if the content is fun. However, the number of flops remains high in both years.
The King of January: Chatha Pacha
There is no confusion here—Chatha Pacha: The Ring of Rowdies is the undisputed winner of the month.
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The “Mammootty Factor”: Even though Roshan Mathew and Arjun Ashokan are the leads, the massive cameo by Mammootty (as Walter) brought the initial crowd.
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Collection Status: The movie has collected over ₹33 Crores worldwide.
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Verdict: SUPER HIT 🟢
Other Notable Performances:
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2nd Place: Prakambanam (Hit). This horror-comedy was the surprise package. With no superstars, it collected approx ₹10 Crores worldwide purely on word-of-mouth.
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The Big Loser: Valathu Vashathe Kallan. Despite being directed by Jeethu Joseph (Drishyam fame), the movie crashed with just ₹6 Crores worldwide.
Why Are Audiences Rejecting Movies? (Analysis)
Why did 17 movies fail? We analyzed the theater trends in Kerala, and here are the three main reasons:
“Content is King, Stars are Secondary”
The audience has made it clear: they will not come just for a big name.
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Nivin Pauly’s Baby Girl failed (approx ₹4 Cr collection) because the thriller plot didn’t engage the masses.
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Biju Menon’s movie failed because the screenplay was weak.
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In contrast, Prakambanam worked because it was a “stress-buster” and fun to watch.
The “OTT Mindset”
With platforms like Disney+ Hotstar and Netflix buying Malayalam movies aggressively, the common audience prefers to wait.
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“Why spend ₹1000 for a family trip to the theater for an average movie when it will come on TV in 28 days?”
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This mindset is killing “average” movies. Only “theater-experience” movies (like the action-packed Chatha Pacha) are getting footfalls.
The Theater Availability Issue
This is a sad reality for small movies. The distribution system this month was unforgiving.
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Movies like Appuram, Poovu, and Sheshippu barely got any screens to begin with.
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Some movies were “washed out” (removed) from theaters within 24 hours because literally zero people showed up for the first few shows.
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Big movies like Chatha Pacha occupied 80% of the screens, leaving no space for smaller films to breathe or grow through word-of-mouth.
Conclusion: The Silent Death of Small Movies
January 2026 proved that marketing is just as important as making the movie. A major reason for the high number of flops this month is the complete failure of promotion for small-budget films.
Many small movies like Appuram, Poovu, and Sheshippu failed not just because of content, but because the audience didn’t even know they were released.
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Zero Visibility: These films had poor advertising reach. Posters were invisible, and trailers didn’t reach YouTube trending lists.
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Social Media Silence: Shockingly, some production teams failed to even update basic details on social media platforms. In an era where Instagram and Facebook drive ticket sales, official pages for these movies were inactive or outdated.
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Wasted Effort: Without a proper digital marketing strategy, these films were “dead on arrival,” washing out of theaters before word-of-mouth could even begin.
For the industry to survive 2026, filmmakers must realize that making a movie is only 50% of the job—selling it to the audience is the other 50%.
What do you think? Did you watch any movies in theaters this January? Which one was your favorite, or are you waiting for them to release on OTT? Let us know in the comments below!


