A question was raised to Vignesh Raja about casting Mamitha Baiju as the lead in "Kara". The concern was simple. Why bring in an actress from another industry and then paint her darker to fit a character that is rooted in a dusky skin tone and a specific cultural space. His response was clear. He said he does not cast based on skin tone and that Mamitha Baiju justified the role through her performance. He spoke about auditions and selecting who fits best and stood by his decision.
That explanation sounds neat. It sounds professional. But it does not survive what is seen on screen.
Having watched Mamitha Baiju in both "Jana Nayagan" and "Kara" there is no space left for polite interpretation. She is the weakest link in both films. In "Kara" it becomes painfully obvious. Surrounded by actors who holds weight and presence she feels completely out of place. Every other performance holds the film together while hers feels disconnected. It is not subtle. It is visible in almost every scene she appears in. The character had potential but nothing comes through. No emotional hold. No conviction. No sense of belonging within the world of the film.
This is not about calling her a bad actress. She has proven that she can work in lighter roles. In something like "Premalu" which is breezy and character driven in a soft way she fits naturally and performs with ease. But when the role demands depth she struggles. She underplays where she needs to stand firm. This was less obvious in "Jana Nayagan" but in "Kara" it becomes unavoidable because of the actors around her who elevate every scene. Her character ends up feeling like an empty space.
So the question cannot be avoided anymore. If not for performance then why was she cast?
The answer points towards something else. Market value.
This is where the pattern becomes clear. An actress gains attention in one industry. She is then brought into another space where the role demands something very specific. Instead of finding someone who naturally fits the role, the film reshapes her appearance to match it. Then the decision is justified in the name of auditions and suitability. This is not casting based on the character. This is casting based on visibility.
And yes this leans into the politics of colour whether it is accepted or not. If the intention was to portray a dusky character with authenticity, there are enough actors within the same industry who already have that presence naturally. Why import someone and artificially construct that identity. What exactly is being achieved here beyond a safer and more marketable face.
The problem becomes bigger when the performance fails to support the decision.
That is where the entire argument falls apart. When the result on screen fails this badly all the explanations begin to sound like excuses. The audience is not blind. When something does not work it is felt immediately. No amount of explanation can change that.
There is also another layer to this. The idea that the market of the heroine can override the demands of the role. That might work in films where presence is enough to hold the scenes. But in films that require performance it gets exposed very quickly. A character cannot be sustained by popularity. It needs ability. It needs understanding. It needs presence.
Fair skin or current popularity does not make someone right for a role. And forcing that equation again and again only weakens films and damages credibility. What makes it worse is the refusal to acknowledge it. There is always a layer of justification wrapped around it as if the audience cannot see what is happening on screen.
At some point the honesty has to come in. If a casting decision is made for market reasons then say it. Stand by it. That is at least straightforward. But building narratives around performance and suitability when the result clearly says otherwise only insults the audience.
Because this is not about one film or one actress. This is a pattern that keeps repeating. And every time it happens the same question remains.
Is the film serving the story or is it serving the market.
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