International Women’s Day: Add these powerful feminist films to your list of weekend binge!

Indian cinema is changing gradually yet slowly. There haven’t been many female-centric films in the industry but there have been few that have captured the complexity of a female character and the issues that they face in a precise manner.

Here is Bollywood Dhamaka’s pick of feminist films you should definitely watch to celebrate International Women’s Day:

Ajji: At a time when gender crimes have acquired epidemic proportions,  ‘Ajji’ produced by Yodlee Films and directed by Devashish Makhija is more relevant than ever. This wrenching story about rape and retribution is a critique not just of the society where even girl children are not safe but of the power structures that protect the perpetrators of the most heinous crimes. The discovery of a little girl’s body in a garbage heap expands into a scathing social commentary and asks tough questions that we need to answer collectively.  What’s more, the avenging spirit in the film is not that of an all-powerful male hero but of a grandmother, an ‘Ajji’.  The film stars Sushama Deshpande, Sharvani Suryavanshi, Abhishek Banerjee, Sadiya Siddiqui, Vikas Kumar, Manuj Sharma, Sudhir Pandey, Kiran Khoje, and Smita Tambe in major roles.

Thappad: In a milieu where ever marital rape is normalised, a slap is not a big enough crime to merit a discussion and yet ‘Thappad’, a 2020  film directed by Anubhav Sinha, and co-produced by Bhushan Kumar of T-Series, asked who should have the right to decide whether a line has been crossed in a relationship. The husband who slaps his wife or the wife who will not forget how casually her dignity was reduced to nothing. That it was “just one slap” is immaterial. Why should there be even a single instance of domestic abuse is the question that the film asks. Starring Taapsee Pannu and Dia Mirza in powerful roles, ‘Thappad’ delivers a punch as it questions deep-seated patriarchal attitudes that allow and condone violence and disrespect towards women.

English Vinglish: This 2012 Gauri  Shinde film very sensitively explored how homemakers are often sidelined in conversations, disrespected by their own children and husbands, undermined and underestimated within the very family units that they have spent their lives nurturing. How the heroine Shashi gains her self-confidence back by enrolling in an English-speaking course is delicately portrayed by the late Sridevi. The film also starred Adil Hussain, French actor Mehdi Nebbou, and Priya Anand.

Lipstick Under My Burkha: This  2016  Alankrita Shrivastava directorial and  Prakash Jha production is easily one of the bravest films made by a woman about women. None of the women in the film are cliches and are unique, complex protagonists searching for fulfilment.  With a scintillating cast of Ratna Pathak, Konkona Sen Sharma, Aahana Kumra and Plabita Borthakur in lead roles, the film looks at female desire and the quest for personal freedom without filters. Despite facing inexplicable backlash for being “lady-oriented,” the film premiered at the Tokyo and Mumbai Film Festivals, where it won the Spirit of Asia Prize and the Oxfam Award for Best Film on Gender Equality.

Angry Indian Goddesses: This under-appreciated  2015  Pan Nalin directorial and  Jungle Book Entertainment production was a disturbing study of how easy random crimes against women are. Starring Sandhya Mridul, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Sarah-Jane Dias, Anushka Manchanda, Amrit Maghera, Rajshri Deshpande, Pavleen Gujral and Adil Hussain, the film documents how the lives of a few close friends are changed forever by a tragedy during their time together in Goa.  The portrayal of female anger and solidarity in this story is one of the most powerful and authentic moments ever filmed.

Madhurima Mitra:

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