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2024 year-ender: 24 women who made Indian cinema proud

In a male-dominated movie industry, women not only broke the glass ceiling, fought ageism and sexual harassment, in reel and real, but also brought home global awards and wrote history for India. Here is a list of handful of the many women out there working in the wings.

January 01, 2025 / 13:56 IST
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Women who changed the game in Indian cinema in 2024.

The year which began in the godawful shadow of a hyper-masculine commercial potboiler released at the fag end of the previous year witnessed men rule the roost on screen in pan-Indian cinema in its first half and then some. These included box office miracles and blunders. Fighter and Bade Miyan Chote Miyan (Hindi), Hanu-Man (Telugu), Kaatera (Kannada), Ayalaan (Tamil) and, in Malayalam: Bramayugam, Malaikottai Vaaliban, Manjummel Boys, Premam and Aadujeevitham.

Read: 2024 first quarter Movies Report Card: 6 south films that made noise at the box office

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Some were great films save the absence of women and the female perspective. All this while, two Indian women, Shuchi Talati (Girls Will be Girls; feature) and Anupama Srinivasan (Nocturnes; documentary), quietly picked up awards at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2024 signalling that the year ahead, especially in independent cinema, will be reclaimed by women. A few months later, Payal Kapadia broke a 30-year stalemate for India at the Cannes Film Festival by winning the Grand Prix.

The year marked the golden jubilee or half a century of Shabana Azmi being an actor. Her debut film Ankur (The Seedling) had released in 1974. Hindi cinema wasn’t the same since. The maker of that film, his debut feature, and father of the Indian new wave and parallel cinema, the prolific Shyam Benegal, breathed his last, aged 90, earlier this month. With him, an era of Indian cinema ended. The way Benegal — whose coming divides Hindi cinema into two halves, before and after him — imagined women and their interiority was a rare view. The only other directors to have thought of the woman, like a woman, consistently, would be Bengali directors Aparna Sen and the late Rituparno Ghosh.