
-
Gary Lineker: England's World Cup hero turned BBC's 'defining voice'
-
Failure means Man City would not 'deserve' Champions League: Guardiola
-
Joe Biden thanks supporters for 'love' after cancer diagnosis
-
Portugal's far-right party gains as premier holds on
-
Three things we learned from the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix
-
Gary Lineker to leave BBC after antisemitism row
-
Serie A title deciders to be played Friday
-
Russian ballet patriarch Yuri Grigorovich dies at 98
-
Gary Lineker to leave BBC after social media 'error'
-
New 'Frankenstein' will be no horror flick, Del Toro says
-
Indian, Romanian climbers die on Nepal's Lhotse
-
EU relief as centrist wins Romania vote but tensions remain
-
African players in Europe: Ndiaye gives Everton perfect send-off
-
UK forges new ties with EU in post-Brexit era
-
Trump to call Putin in push for Ukraine ceasefire
-
Guinness maker Diageo cuts costs, eyes US tariff hit
-
Farioli resigns as Ajax coach due to 'different visions'
-
Trump turning US into authoritarian regime, says Emmy winner
-
Far right gains in Portuguese polls as PM holds on
-
French state covered up Nestle water scandal: Senate report
-
French intelligence rejects Telegram founder's claim of Romania vote meddling
-
Trump tariffs force EU to cut 2025 eurozone growth forecast
-
Israel will 'take control of all' of Gaza, PM says
-
Gael Garcia Bernal retells Philippines history in new film
-
China's Xiaomi to invest nearly $7 bn in chips
-
Women claim spotlight in India's macho movie industry
-
Stocks, dollar drop after US loses last triple-A credit rating
-
Bruno Fernandes: Man Utd's visionary leader
-
UK-EU set to seal closer ties in first summit since Brexit
-
Europa League golden ticket offers Man Utd, Spurs salvation
-
Tanzania opposition leader defiant as he appears for treason trial
-
Israel strikes Gaza after 'basic' food aid pledge
-
Markets drop after US loses last triple-A credit rating
-
Ryanair annual profit drops 16% as fares fall
-
Five things to know about Scarlett Johansson
-
Polar bear biopsies to shed light on Arctic pollutants
-
Nvidia unveils plan for Taiwan's first 'AI supercomputer'
-
Kiss to coach Australia-New Zealand combined XV against Lions
-
'Leave our marshes alone': Iraqis fear oil drilling would destroy fabled wetlands
-
Asian markets drop after US loses last triple-A credit rating
-
China factory output beats forecasts, weathering tariffs
-
$TRUMP dinner blurs lines between profit and politics
-
Syrians chase equestrian glory in sport once dominated by Assads
-
Trump to hold call with Putin in push for Ukraine ceasefire
-
Trump to hold call with Putin in push for Ukraine ceasfire
-
Starmer to host first UK-EU summit since Brexit
-
More misery for Messi and Miami with Florida derby defeat
-
Rahm ready to 'get over it' and 'move on' after PGA failure
-
Mr. Gad Condemns Paragon Board's Concealment of Key Information Regarding the New Litigation and Seeming Abuse of Fiduciary Duty and Calls for Immediate Public Release of Complaint for Stockholder Transparency
-
Fast Finance Pay Corp Releases First Quarter 2025 Financial Results

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.
"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."
M.A.Colin--AMWN