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What Two Acclaimed Female-Directed Movies Say About Indian Cinema

“Laapataa Ladies” and “All We Imagine as Light” have both captivated audiences at home. But only one was able to get India’s nod for the best foreign film Oscar.

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Onstage a woman in a long black dress smiles widely, as three women in saris look at her, smiling and applauding.
Payal Kapadia, right, director of “All We Imagine as Light,” at the Cannes Film Festival in May, where her movie won the Grand Prix.Credit...Stephane Mahe/Reuters

Anupreeta Das and

Reporting from New Delhi

One is a deft comedy about the misadventures of two young brides in rural India. The other is a delicate tale about the intersecting lives of three women in cosmopolitan Mumbai.

And both films might have a shot at winning Academy Awards — a rare prospect for a country that produces more than 1,000 movies a year but has found the topmost industry honors hard to come by.

With small budgets and unconventional plots, “Laapataa Ladies” and “All We Imagine as Light” have captivated audiences. That both were directed by women and have female-centric themes has become an additional point of pride in India, where the frothy romps of male-dominated Bollywood are a large part of the cinematic landscape.

Directed by Kiran Rao, “Laapataa Ladies” — renamed “Lost Ladies” for its Oscar campaign — has had a hugely successful run in the domestic market since its March release, and is now streaming on Netflix.

“All We Imagine as Light,” directed by Payal Kapadia, won the Grand Prix at Cannes in May. It was released in Indian theaters this month, and opened on Nov. 15 in New York and Los Angeles.

In a review of the movie for The New York Times, Manohla Dargis called it a “quiet drama about fragility, beauty and kinship” that is “flat-out wonderful, one of finest of the year.”


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