The Prague Post - Women claim spotlight in India's macho movie industry

EUR -
AED 4.139708
AFN 79.209431
ALL 98.918583
AMD 435.588661
ANG 2.017119
AOA 1033.536074
ARS 1287.706554
AUD 1.751179
AWG 2.03157
AZN 1.91884
BAM 1.970731
BBD 2.278564
BDT 137.118887
BGN 1.961695
BHD 0.424929
BIF 3358.042347
BMD 1.127084
BND 1.465403
BOB 7.798082
BRL 6.38369
BSD 1.12854
BTN 96.478977
BWP 15.260486
BYN 3.693182
BYR 22090.854274
BZD 2.266875
CAD 1.572288
CDF 3235.859269
CHF 0.939143
CLF 0.027678
CLP 1062.119272
CNY 8.125715
CNH 8.129598
COP 4749.939419
CRC 571.625875
CUC 1.127084
CUP 29.867737
CVE 111.106805
CZK 24.922086
DJF 200.962601
DKK 7.461456
DOP 66.412588
DZD 149.833388
EGP 56.379357
ERN 16.906266
ETB 152.352251
FJD 2.555269
FKP 0.849004
GBP 0.842518
GEL 3.088359
GGP 0.849004
GHS 13.994026
GIP 0.849004
GMD 81.673965
GNF 9773.045888
GTQ 8.664416
GYD 236.108889
HKD 8.812994
HNL 29.364219
HRK 7.547185
HTG 147.668819
HUF 402.704988
IDR 18537.664343
ILS 3.990101
IMP 0.849004
INR 96.235707
IQD 1478.401168
IRR 47464.340959
ISK 145.912076
JEP 0.849004
JMD 179.901435
JOD 0.799064
JPY 163.244084
KES 145.676055
KGS 98.563266
KHR 4516.217308
KMF 497.606511
KPW 1014.375962
KRW 1566.590946
KWD 0.346263
KYD 0.940526
KZT 575.399538
LAK 24406.920042
LBP 101115.908877
LKR 337.678435
LRD 225.700026
LSL 20.372251
LTL 3.327987
LVL 0.681762
LYD 6.226173
MAD 10.469523
MDL 19.658947
MGA 5058.279384
MKD 61.720608
MMK 2366.529978
MNT 4028.176653
MOP 9.084227
MRU 44.667025
MUR 52.094015
MVR 17.424812
MWK 1956.808479
MXN 21.922246
MYR 4.84026
MZN 72.020561
NAD 20.372251
NGN 1809.680164
NIO 41.524613
NOK 11.635684
NPR 154.365185
NZD 1.909489
OMR 0.433861
PAB 1.128551
PEN 4.160724
PGK 4.690496
PHP 62.752684
PKR 317.789929
PLN 4.281399
PYG 9010.266659
QAR 4.113154
RON 5.0197
RSD 118.124979
RUB 90.586636
RWF 1616.029577
SAR 4.227393
SBD 9.400367
SCR 16.024517
SDG 676.8118
SEK 10.94532
SGD 1.458644
SHP 0.885711
SLE 25.583748
SLL 23634.396603
SOS 644.981003
SRD 41.230441
STD 23328.371541
SVC 9.874817
SYP 14654.195668
SZL 20.377208
THB 37.249581
TJS 11.635053
TMT 3.950431
TND 3.402489
TOP 2.639748
TRY 43.762885
TTD 7.654998
TWD 33.977655
TZS 3037.492526
UAH 46.844705
UGX 4129.285704
USD 1.127084
UYU 46.954503
UZS 14631.858886
VES 106.178367
VND 29239.387092
VUV 136.514777
WST 3.131631
XAF 660.958918
XAG 0.034614
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.046002
XDR 0.822021
XOF 660.964827
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.119693
ZAR 20.30908
ZMK 10145.109257
ZMW 30.334833
ZWL 362.920718
  • RBGPF

    64.5000

    64.5

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.05

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.5

    0%

  • NGG

    1.2500

    71.28

    +1.75%

  • GSK

    0.4991

    37.64

    +1.33%

  • BTI

    1.2700

    42.64

    +2.98%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    62.64

    -0.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    10.72

    +0.19%

  • AZN

    0.8500

    68.81

    +1.24%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.45

    +1.9%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    54.57

    +0.97%

  • CMSD

    0.0472

    22.06

    +0.21%

  • BCC

    0.9200

    91.91

    +1%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    21.56

    -0.32%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.9

    +1.24%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.76

    +0.44%

Women claim spotlight in India's macho movie industry
Women claim spotlight in India's macho movie industry / Photo: Sameer Al-Doumy - AFP

Women claim spotlight in India's macho movie industry

India's giant movie industry is known for its macho, men-centric storylines, but a wave of women filmmakers is helping to break the mould.

Text size:

"More and more women are writing their stories, turning them into films," said writer-director Reema Kagti, who believes the trend brings a more "real and healthy perspective" to movies, with complex, outspoken women characters who are masters of their own story.

The world's most populous nation churns out 1,800 to 2,000 films in more than 20 languages annually -- and Hindi-language Bollywood is one of the largest segments, with more than 300 productions.

Yet the films have often failed to portray women authentically, choosing instead to box them into being passive housewives or mothers who bow to societal pressure.

A 2023 study by the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) found that female characters in most chart-topping Indian films play the role of a romantic interest -- and are "fair skinned with a thin body type and a small screen time".

But industry insiders point to a slate of women-directed movies earning international acclaim that have also scored well at the tough domestic box office.

Malayalam-language film "All We Imagine as Light", a poetic tale about two nurses forging an intergenerational friendship, was the first Indian production to win the Grand Prix at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival.

Director Payal Kapadia shunned the one-dimensional portrayal of women on Indian screens which tends to mimic "unrealistic standards set by society", she said, in favour of one that allows women to "just be ourselves, authentic and true to how we are in everyday life".

India's official entry for the 2025 Oscars was Kiran Rao's "Lost Ladies" -- "Laapataa Ladies" in Hindi -- a comedy which challenges convictions surrounding marriage and womanhood, a sign of a shift -- even if it missed the final shortlist.

- 'More inclusive narratives' -

It is not only arthouse films that are winning hearts.

Mainstream movies with strong women co-leads are filling up theatres as well.

"Stree 2", a horror comedy featuring Bollywood star Shraddha Kapoor, smashed box office records last year, beating earnings by superstar Shah Rukh Khan's action flick "Jawan".

And "Crew", a heist comedy about flight attendants, was widely seen as a win for women-centric movies.

"Women still face challenges in telling stories from their perspective", said actor-producer Dia Mirza.

"However, the increasing presence of female directors, producers and writers is paving the way for more inclusive narratives."

Movies can also tackle the way regressive traditions manifest in the daily lives of Indian families.

"Mrs.", a Hindi-language film released in February, dives into the unseen labour of a newlywed housewife, her silenced aspirations and the societal conditioning she struggles with.

"Across social media, you can see people posting -- that the majority of women in India go through this turmoil," said Lakshmi Lingam, a Mumbai-based sociologist.

She points out that there was no backlash to the film.

"The voices of women saying, 'Yes, this is true and I can see myself there' is very high," she said.

"So, there is that kind of ecosystem of women resonating with many of the ideas these women filmmakers are making."

- 'Still misogynistic' -

Industry figures suggest progress is being made, albeit slowly.

Last year, 15 percent of Indian movies surveyed hired women for key production positions, up from 10 percent in 2022, according to a report by Ormax Media and Film Companion Studios.

Konkona Sen Sharma, an actor-director who is a champion of women-oriented cinema, is cautiously optimistic about the role women will play in the future.

Women are increasingly present in the film industry, but "we still don't have enough women in positions of power," she said.

Filmmaker Shonali Bose points out that women directors need the independence and financial backing to tell new stories.

"Our problem is not to do with gender, it is getting to make what we want to make," Bose said.

"When we want to make world cinema, we are facing market forces which are getting increasingly conservative."

Lingam, the sociologist, said that while moviegoers are being "exposed to the changing discourse", mainstream films are "still very male-orientated" and plotlines "still misogynistic".

"Some of the women scriptwriters have great ideas, but producers don't want to back those stories," she said.

"They intervene and make so many changes by converting the female protagonist into a male to make a 'larger-than-life character'. At the end of the day, the buck actually dictates what can be made and what cannot."

V.Sedlak--TPP