Women in action
This ‘slick’ action film with two sisters (Sita and Durga) on a mission has the leads prancing around in an array of colourful athleisure between major action sequences. They are whimsical enough to play with young pahadi children while still looking for their lost father, and have stern ‘game on’ faces while fighting the bad guys. Though the sequences seem well-choreographed and executed, it is but apparent that the entire film is written by a man and is created to cater to the male gaze.The Hindu’s review states that Alia uses her expressive face to tell the story of the fight, making every punch and kick feel deeply personal.
- ▪This ‘slick’ action film with two sisters (Sita and Durga) on a mission has the leads prancing around in an array of colourful athleisure between major action sequences.
- ▪They are whimsical enough to play with young pahadi children while still looking for their lost father, and have stern ‘game on’ faces while fighting the bad guys.
- ▪Though the sequences seem well-choreographed and executed, it is but apparent that the entire film is written by a man and is created to cater to the male gaze.The Hindu’s review states that Alia uses her expressive face to tell the story o
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
(This article is part of the Gender Agenda newsletter. To get the newsletter in your inbox every Sunday, subscribe here.)Over the last two weeks, there has been chatter surrounding the release of women-led action films where the heroines slice up the bad guys with perfectly manicured nails.There is Alpha starring Alia Bhatt and Sharvari, which I had the misfortune of watching. This ‘slick’ action film with two sisters (Sita and Durga) on a mission has the leads prancing around in an array of colourful athleisure between major action sequences. They are whimsical enough to play with young pahadi children while still looking for their lost father, and have stern ‘game on’ faces while fighting the bad guys.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at The Hindu.