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Bollywood star Alia Bhatt tackles domestic violence in Netflix’s ‘Darlings’

Liz Kang, CNN

In Netflix’s latest big-budget Hindi movie, “Darlings,” Bollywood megastar Alia Bhatt’s character is given some unexpected marriage advice by her mother: “Add some rat poison in his food.”

It’s one of several drastic ideas the protagonists consider as they confront an abusive relationship and attempt, albeit clumsily, to find a resolution. But for all the comedy in the movie’s twisting plot, the topic it addresses is a profoundly serious one.

For Bhatt, who also served as the film’s co-producer, “Darlings” offered a chance to tackle the issue of domestic violence head on.

“I need to prove a point, as a producer, that I’m not just producing a film for the heck of it,” she told CNN in a video interview from Mumbai. “I have not picked this subject because I could. I wanted to. I chose it and I wanted to tell this story.”

Now among Bollywood’s top-paid talent, Bhatt was the highest-ranking woman in Forbes India’s latest Celebrity 100 list, with estimated earnings of over $7 million in 2019. Some of her most critically-acclaimed performances have seen her portray dynamic, unconventional female characters in troubling circumstances — a kidnapped migrant worker in 2016’s “Udta Punjab” or a woman sold into prostitution before becoming a rights activist in the recent hit “Gangubai Kathiawadi.”

The 29-year-old has also worked alongside some of India’s top female directors in recent years, including Meghna Gulzar and Zoya Akhtar. And with “Darlings” marking a debut for Bhatt’s new production house, Eternal Sunshine Productions, the actor hopes to use her behind-the-scenes role to encourage greater representation in Bollywood.

“I feel — slowly, slowly — from being a very male-dominated room, I (now) see the balance. I see a lot of women,” she said. “And that’s happened over the last 10 years. I’ve seen the change — and it’s getting to a very juicy, exciting time.”

“Darlings” is, in essence, a mother-daughter tale about two women, Badru and Shamshu (played by Bhatt and Shefali Shah, respectively), grappling with abuse. It is a story told largely by women, with first-time director Jasmeet K. Reen also co-writing the script.

The movie, which has been well-received by critics in India, broaches the topic of domestic abuse with considerable care. Reen consciously refrained from showing violence in the film’s early scenes, symbolizing how repeated abuse had become normalized to the point of invisibility.

“I didn’t want to sensationalize it,” she told CNN.

As the violent nature of Badru’s marriage comes to light, so too does the mother-and-daughter pair’s urgency to confront and remove themselves from the abuse. Reen said the lead characters were informed by her own proximity to domestic violence, recounting an instance when her aunt called her to ask whether her husband had ever hit her. The director, who was at first appalled by the question, realized it was neither her marriage nor her aunt that was the problem — but rather a culture where violence is prevalent enough for the question to arise in the first place.

“You grew up with it, so you empathize more (and) you understand (it) more,” she said. “And maybe that helps you build stronger, non-stereotypical (female) characters.”

The World Health Organization has ranked India among 35 countries with the highest rate of domestic abuse, estimating that 35% of women have at least once been subjected to physical or sexual violence from a partner. An Indian government survey conducted between 2019 and 2021 also found that only 14% of Indian women who experienced physical or sexual violence had sought help to prevent further abuse.

Telling her story against this backdrop, Reen was mindful not to trivialize the subject matter. “It’s not a normal Bollywood film,” she said. “I tried to play with structure, I tried to play with genre — to say something and be sensitive towards it.”

The Indian movie industry has a complex relationship with depictions of abuse. According to Megha Anwer and Anupama Arora, co-authors of the book “Bollywood’s New Woman,” Hindi cinema has a long history of “both subtextual and explicit engagement with the issue of domestic violence.”

They told CNN jointly over email that, to date, Bollywood’s approach to domestic violence can be divided into two strands: one where violence against women is normalized and another that demonstrates “both the violence women experience and their impulse towards resistance.” The authors cited Alia Bhatt’s 2014 movie “Highway,” in which her character confronts and publicly outs her abuser, as an example of the latter.

“Bollywood, like most industries in India, is male-dominated and that largely determines who gets represented and how,” said Anwer and Arora, a clinical associate professor at Purdue University’s Honors College and a professor of English and communication and women’s and gender studies at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, respectively. “This is all determined by a structural inequity that is gendered in nature.”

Female-led productions like “Darlings” are, however, increasingly common in Bollywood — and they are changing how women participate in storytelling, said Bhatt, who was also involved in pre-production and script revisions. Reen commended Netflix for encouraging her to tell this story, saying she hopes “other filmmakers will be encouraged to write more stuff like this.”

Both women also credited their own mothers as sources of inspiration and support.

“I come from a middle-class family, but my mother was supportive of my dreams,” Reen said.

Bhatt, who is currently expecting a child with husband Ranbir Kapoor, meanwhile said that her mother — the actor Soni Razdan — used to drive herself to movie sets while pregnant “because she was shooting for TV series and they couldn’t write her (out).”

“I don’t maybe speak about it enough or too often. But (she’s) made a very, very important mark on my life.” Bhatt explained. “My mother is such a huge inspiration for me.”

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