Malta Independent

Storm over India film on women who ‘smoke, drink and have sex’

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A Bollywood summer film that shows female bonding among four hard drinking, foul-mouthed friends has sparked a social media storm.

Set in south Delhi, one of India’s poshest neighbourh­oods, Veere Di Wedding is about a group of school friends who are now grown up independen­t women. The film is about four BFFs (best friends forever) and a wedding gone wrong.

The four friends swear freely, drink and throw up with equal speed, and have flings.

They deal with familiar Indian social tropes like the distaste for arranged marriages, weight issues, being judged by friends and relatives, putting up with the pressures of a big fat over-the-top wedding, and balancing parental approval and those of husbands’ families.

Their open and casual swearing and discussion of their sexual needs seems a breath of fresh air for an Indian film. The four women are unapologet­ic about wanting sex or their flippant display of wealth.

Veere Di Wedding began trending on Twitter soon after a successful release, as a group of viewers attacked the actor Swara Bhaskar, who plays one of the female leads, for a scene which shows her masturbati­ng.

One of them said he was “embarrasse­d” about the scene as he had taken his granny along to watch the film.

There were also jokes galore on taking grandparen­ts to films containing taboo subjects.

The film shows Bhaskar’s character’s marriage unravellin­g after her husband finds her in bed “flying solo”.

She tells her friend she had “half-cheated” on her spouse. She says her husband, who saw her with a sex toy, had begun to “blackmail her” and she takes to the bottle to overcome her shame before her parents and relatives.

Social media is divided down the middle. A section of viewers and critics have panned the film saying it’s a failed opportunit­y to showcase female bonding in a sensible manner. They say the film subscribes to regressive notions of female sexuality.

“The girls have a nice chemistry but the film’s misguided notions of feminism are its undoing,” says film critic Rajiv Masand.

Others who have supported Bhaskar on Twitter have also not stopped themselves from saying that the film subscribes to regressive notions of female sexuality.

One critic said the film was a “wasted opportunit­y”, stacked with clichéd stereotype­s about progressiv­e women:

Many defended the film, saying it was simply about women having fun and nothing more. They wondered why it should be a commentary on feminism:

Other viewers said the film didn’t work, because it was, simply, “poorly made”.

Even as the social media storm continues, Veere Di Wedding appears to have given a fillip to womenled movies in Bollywood, which has been traditiona­lly squeamish about handling taboo subjects like female masturbati­on. The breezy summer film has broken some myths about Indian women and its success proves that it has found an approving audience.

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