For decades, South Indian cinema spanning Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, and Kannada language film industries has been anchored in male-centric narratives. The cultural expectation was clear: mass entertainers typically revolved around heroes, larger-than-life action sequences, melodrama, and the box office pull of male stars. Women, while often integral, existed most frequently in ornamental, romantic, or supporting roles. That is changing and in 2025, it has changed strikingly. A quiet revolution is underway, one that reimagines screen narratives, recalibrates audience expectations, and elevates female protagonists from accessories to architects of their own stories.From peripheral to central: A shifting narrative landscapeThe transformation has not happened overnight. It was built on milestones films that insisted on centralising women’s interior worlds, ambitions, fears, strengths, and contradictions. These films didn’t just feature women; they were led by them.One of the earliest notable examples in recent memory is ‘Rudhramadevi’ (2015), starring Anushka Shetty, it was based on the life of Rudhramadevi – one of the most prominent rulers of Kakatiya dynasty in the Deccan and of the few ruling queens in Indian history. In an industry often reluctant to make women-led action films, this period biopic stood for telling a story of a powerful woman ruler. Before this one, Shetty had also done ‘Arundhati’, a horror-fantasy which she led from the front. Biopics and emotional authenticity: ‘Mahanati’ and beyondIn 2018, ‘Mahanati’, the biographical drama of legendary South Indian actress Savitri, brought a new texture to female storytelling. With Keerthy Suresh’s luminous performance as the titular icon, ‘Mahanati’ showcased how women’s stories, rooted in the emotional and cultural texture of cinema history itself, could be both critically acclaimed and commercially viable. It went on to be the highest grossing female led film from South India till Kalyani Priyadarshan’s ‘Lokah: Chapter 1- Chandra’ released this year. Also in the same year released Bhaagamathie once again led by Anushka Shetty- the film blended horror and thriller with a potent female lead who refuses to be reduced to fear alone. Its success further cemented the notion that women could command audiences in high-concept genre films.But it was in 2025 that South Indian cinema truly felt the shift in female-driven storytelling in a big way. ‘Lokah Chapter 1: Chandra’ headlined by Kalyani Priyadarshan- a Malayalam superhero film centred on a mysterious woman summoned to fight corruption and injustice did something few would have predicted a year earlier: it became the highest-grossing female-led film in South Indian history and 2nd highest female led film of Indian Cinema.. Not only did it break the ₹100 crore mark in the country , it also went on to become the highest grossing Malayalam film of all time. The film also demonstrated that female superheroes could attract mass audiences without falling back on male co-stars to sell tickets.It wasn’t just box office numbers that made Lokah significant, it was the confidence with which the story granted agency to its female central figure, positioning her not as a companion or quest object but as the epicentre of her own mythology.Adding to the mix was Rahul Ravindran helmed and Rashmika Mandanna starrer ‘The Girlfriend’ which examined toxic relationships through a brave and unflinching lens.Social realism & Female interior worldsParallel to blockbuster superhero narratives, another important wave has been female-led social realism. The Malayalam sensation ‘The Great Indian Kitchen’ (2021) saw the release of its Hindi remake with Sanya Malhotra. It went on to become one of the most viewed films of Zee5 for the year. These films don’t rely on spectacle. Instead, their power comes from emotional accuracy and the quiet brutality of domestic expectations. The year also saw Anupama Parmeswaran step up the heat with hard hitting stories surrounding women and their place in society. Her first film ‘Parada’ told story of a village bound by the belief that women must remain veiled to ward off a curse and other film ‘JSK: Janaki V vs State of Kerala’ told the story of a rape victim. The film exposed the deep moral and ethical dilemmas of the Indian judicial system. The year also saw the release of Anushka Shetty’s ‘Ghaati’, the film told the story of a woman seeking revenge and striving to lift her community out of an endless exploitation. 2026 has also begun with a bang for women led films and this time it is newly married Samantha Ruth Prabhu with her film ‘Maa Inti Bangaaram’. The film is co-written and created by her husband Raj Nidimoru. Talking about Samantha said, “Maa Inti Bangaaram tells the story of a woman whose strength comes as much from her vulnerability as from her courage. Playing this character and nurturing this film as a producer has been an incredibly fulfilling journey for me. The world of this film is rooted and emotional with a narrative style dedicated to being family first and slice of life whilst maintaining its quirky, edgy energy. I’m truly excited for audiences to experience this story and connect with its spirit when it reaches them.”It isn’t like all the female led films released this year or in the past have worked at the box office -some connected and some didn’t. And this is the case also with the male led films. This surge in female-led films isn’t simply about representation. It’s about diversification of narrative forms, deeper engagement with varied audience experiences, and importantly commercial recognition that stories centred on women can sell tickets, ignite conversations, and win awards. The shift also reflects broader cultural currents that women on screen are no longer just the love interest, the caretaker, the victim, or the ornament, they are heroes, architects of their fates, flawed and powerful on their own terms.Some may celebrate these films as the moment the glass ceiling shattered; in reality, this is only the opening act of a far longer story
