Nidheesh M K@mknid
Dileep walked free today.
The legal case will continue.
But let’s take a moment to sink this day. These eight years ushered in a cultural reset that cannot be reversed by any court decision.
The legal case itself made abstractions like patriarchy and power structures suddenly acquire physical weight, became things you could point to, document, fight in a courtroom.
But the case’s true significance lies in how it equipped a Malayali to hold powerful men accountable, how male impunity became slightly less absolute, how silence became slightly less obligatory.
When the survivor filed her complaint on that February night in 2017, she couldn’t have known she was tipping the first domino in a sequence that would topple structures standing for decades. The crime itself—abduction and sexual assault in a moving car, recorded by the perpetrator—was horrific enough. But the complaint’s filing set off a chain reaction that would dismantle the Malayalam film industry’s carefully maintained architecture of silence.
Something changed in how Malayalis talk about gender and cinema. Before this case, discussions of “casting couch” culture existed in whispered rumors, blind items, and knowing jokes. After 2017, these conversations moved to op-eds in major newspapers, prime-time news debates, social media discourse with real names attached.
Young women I’ve interviewed for various stories now reference post-actress assault case as a temporal marker, a before-and-after in their consciousness about gender dynamics in Kerala. They can’t point to what changed exactly, but they know something did.
Kerala’s film industry long maintained a self-image as somehow more progressive, more artistic, less crass than Bollywood or South Indian commercial cinema. The WCC’s formation and the testimonies that emerged shattered this exceptionalism. Malayalam cinema was revealed to be just as patriarchal, just as structurally violent toward women, just as invested in protecting powerful men.
This loss of innocence punctured collective myth-making.
The survivor’s decision to continue her career, to be photographed smiling at events, to do romantic scenes, challenged Kerala’s narrow conception of how assault survivors should behave. She didn’t subscribe to visible suffering, withdrawal from public life or performance of permanent trauma.
Her refusal of that script didn’t just help her personally; it expanded imaginative space for other survivors. The idea that you can be assaulted and still be sexual, ambitious, glamorous, professionally successful. This cognitive shift ripples outward in ways impossible to quantify.
The Women in Cinema Collective didn’t exist before May 2017. Now it does with office space, regular meetings, official spokespeople, institutional memory. You can attend their press conferences, read their statements, trace their interventions.
The Hema Committee Report didn’t exist before 2017. Now there’s a 235-page government document sitting in archives, cited in academic papers, referenced in parliamentary debates. 30+ FIRs were filed.
A.M.M.A’s entire leadership went into resignation, leaving a vacuum that forces institutional restructuring. These are concrete institutional realities that exist independently of how anyone feels about today’s verdict.
Then there are things you can feel but can’t put a finger on. On film sets, a moment of calculation exists now before certain jokes get told, before certain demands get made, before power gets exercised in certain ways.
It’s not that harassment stopped. It’s not that power dynamics disappeared. It’s that there’s a new variable in the risk calculation: Could this get documented in ways that damage me even if I’m never convicted?