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From Cannes to Oscars, Bollywood's women challenge India's ‘misogynistic' storylines

From Cannes to Oscars, Bollywood's women challenge India's ‘misogynistic' storylines

India 's giant movie industry is known for its macho, male-centric storylines, but a wave of women filmmakers is helping to break the mould.
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'More women are writing their stories, turning them into films,' said writer-director Reema Kagti, who believes the trend brought a more 'real and healthy perspective' to films, 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 found that
female characters in most chart-topping Indian films play the role of a romantic interest – and were 'fair skinned with a thin body type and a small screen time'.
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But industry insiders point to a slate of women-directed films earning international acclaim that have also scored well at the tough domestic box office.

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Fine and dandy: how luxury houses are embracing a return to refined accoutrements, from British labels Dunhill and Purdey, to Indian fashion designer Sabyasachi Mukherjee
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