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Metro… In Dino leaves its women partially healed, not transformed
Metro… In Dino leaves its women partially healed, not transformed

Indian Express

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Indian Express

Metro… In Dino leaves its women partially healed, not transformed

Anurag Basu's Metro… In Dino attempts to portray the emotional complexities of modern love, but beneath its mosaic of stories lies a troubling pattern: women still sacrificing more than they should, forgiving more than they must, and quietly disappearing into the background of someone else's story. For all its depth and beauty, the film leaves behind a haunting truth — not much has changed in 18 years, even within Anurag's own cinematic universe. Let's rewind to 2007. In Life in a… Metro, Shilpa Shetty's character Shikha discovers her husband Ranjeet (Kay Kay Menon) is having an affair. Around the same time, she experiences emotional closeness—and perhaps the beginnings of love—with another man (Shiney Ahuja). But when her husband finds out, he leaves her in anger, despite his own long-term infidelity. Only after his affair ends (when Kangana Ranaut's character falls in love with someone else) does he return to his wife. Her emotional growth, her right to heal or explore affection, is overridden by the weight of marital and societal expectations. His betrayal is forgiven; her emotional escape is not. Fast forward to 2025. The emotional dynamics remain eerily similar. This time, it's Kajol (Konkona Sen Sharma) in Metro… In Dino, who faces them. In a strong statement, she tells her mother Shibani ( Neena Gupta): 'Mujhe kabhi na apke jaisa banna nahi tha (I never wanted to turn out like you). I have become a doormat just like you and I hate myself for it!' It's a brutal confrontation—one woman facing another about inherited emotional silence and generational compromise. Her husband Monty (Pankaj Tripathi) has cheated on her seven times. She walks away, chooses herself, and begins to heal. But the film circles back. Her husband's efforts to 'win her back' are rewarded with reconciliation. The woman who dared to speak out ends up folding in. Just like how Shibani did, years ago when she was cheated on by her husband Sanjeev (Saswata Chatterjee). ALSO READ | Metro In Dino review: Sara Ali Khan plays a Kareena Kapoor-coded character in Anurag Basu's annoying and exhilarating film The arc of Fatima Sana Shaikh's character Shruti is just as heartbreaking. An adventurous, career-oriented woman, she marries the love of her life Akash (Ali Fazal) not by choice but due to parental pressure. Their pregnancy? Again, a result of external expectations. Shruti quits her job to support him, and prepares herself for motherhood, only for Akash to back out—fearful of fatherhood, consumed by his playback singing dreams. She agrees to an abortion. They go to different cities, chasing separate careers. But Shruti returns and quits her job again to support Akash, who remains emotionally unavailable and deeply insecure. She is emotionally isolated and physically burdened. He barely notices. In the end, Akash gets his dream job. Shruti aborts silently. They reunite, get pregnant again, and the film closes with her doing the emotional and physical labor of motherhood while Ali records music. The final image—Fatima driving, shopping, handling a baby—speaks volumes: men get to dream, women get to survive. Yes, characters like Shibani and Chumki (played by Sara Ali Khan) experience some form of fulfilment. Shibani reconnects with her passion for theatre and forgives her husband. Chumki slaps her predatory boss, walks out of an ungrateful engagement, and chooses a kinder man Parth (played by Aditya Roy Kapur). But even these arcs are rooted in men or romantic endings. There is no space for unaccompanied self-actualisation. What's especially frustrating is how the film dresses these compromises as victories. The camera never lingers on what the women give up—careers, dignity, peace. Shruti's abortion isn't a conversation; it's a background act of sacrifice to Akash's foreground success. Kajol's return to her husband isn't celebrated, but it isn't challenged either. It's presented as… inevitable. ALSO READ | With Metro… In Dino, Anurag Basu defies box office logic as he makes yet another mad, messy musical These aren't isolated choices—they reflect a larger cinematic pattern. In Indian films, even those marketed as progressive, women often begin with strength but are guided gently back into the fold of duty, sacrifice, and quiet endurance. Rarely do they end with freedom, selfish joy, or glorious solitude. Yes, one might argue that Anurag Basu is simply portraying real-life truths. But when every woman's arc bends toward compromise, it stops being realistic and becomes romantic fatalism—the idea that no matter how far women stretch, they must return. That even if they find themselves, they will always come home—to someone else's home and someone else's dream. It's very rare when films end with woman choosing themselves over any and everything. This rarity was seen in the 2023 film Mrs. Originally made in Malayalam as The Great Indian Kitchen, and later remade in Hindi with Sanya Malhotra in the lead, Mrs offers a rare cinematic pivot. Sanya plays Richa, a homemaker who begins to question the structure of her marriage and her life after a traumatic incident shatters her perception of safety and identity. Unlike so many stories that glorify sacrifice, Mrs dares to ask: What if she chooses herself instead? Richa's journey is not loud or violent. It is gentle, yet unyielding. She chooses freedom over familiarity, selfhood over silence, dignity over duty. Her walk away from an unworthy life is not dramatic—it is seismic in its stillness. And that's what makes it revolutionary. Where Metro… In Dino frames forgiveness as closure, Mrs offers something far more radical: a woman walking into the unknown without guilt. While Basu's film may reflect emotional truths, it risks normalising them. In contrast, Mrs shows us that a woman doesn't just have to endure the world. She can step out of it entirely, on her own terms. Because sometimes, the most powerful thing a woman can do is not forgive, not return, and not compromise—but simply choose herself. Yes, it's hard to walk away from comfort. Very few dare to take that step. But if women in cinema won't choose themselves, how will women in reality ever dare to? P.S. For the first time in my life, I didn't want to hear Pritam Da. The music, though beautiful in parts, felt excessive. After a point, the songs began to grate more than they moved. Jyothi Jha works as a Copy Editor at the Indian Express. She brings in more than 5 years of experience where she has covered Entertainment majorly for TV9, NDTV and Republic Media. Apart from Entertainment, she has been an anchor, copy editor and managed production team under the Politics and Daily News segment. She's passionate about Journalism and it has always been her first choice, she believes in what George Orwell had once said, " Journalism is printing what someone else does not want you to do, rest everything is public relations". ... Read More

Munawar Faruqui married Mehzabeen for his son Mikael, didn't know he would tie the knot until a month prior: ‘Did it for him'
Munawar Faruqui married Mehzabeen for his son Mikael, didn't know he would tie the knot until a month prior: ‘Did it for him'

Indian Express

time04-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Indian Express

Munawar Faruqui married Mehzabeen for his son Mikael, didn't know he would tie the knot until a month prior: ‘Did it for him'

During his time in the Bigg Boss house, actor-comedian Munawar Faruqui stayed in the limelight for his controversial love life, and he also battled some accusations of cheating on his then girlfriend. But, soon after Bigg Boss ended in January 2024, Munawar surprised his fans and followers as he got married to Mehzabeen Coatwala. During his recent appearance on Farah Khan's YouTube channel, Munawar opened up about his decision to get married. He got married in May 2024 and shared with Farah that the wedding was fixed just a month prior. When Farah asked if he knew his wife-to-be while he was in the Bigg Boss house, he said, 'No.' Farah was surprised to know that Munawar tied the knot with Mehzabeen within five months of knowing her. Munawar then shared how he came upon the decision of getting married. 'When I came out of Bigg Boss, I was working a lot. Mikael was living with my sister then. He was with me for a week and we spent a lot of time together and when he was leaving, I felt like I don't want him to go. I felt that he needs me. He kept hugging me the whole time,' he shared as he spoke about his seven-year-old son from his first wife. Munawar shared that he essentially got married for the sake of his son. 'When he was leaving, I felt like he needs me and more than him, I think I need him. In that moment. I thought what is it that I should do so I can make him stay with me. For him, I took that decision,' he said and added that his wife Mehzabeen was in a 'similar situation' as she too, has a 10-year-old daughter. ALSO READ | Metro In Dino movie review: Sara Ali Khan plays a Kareena Kapoor-coded character in Anurag Basu's annoying and exhilarating film Farah complimented Munawar on his 'blended family' as Munawar said that this was like a 'puzzle.' 'I asked her the next day, 'Are you okay marrying me?' I stayed with that decision the whole night. I felt that Mikael should stay with me, I was just praying for that,' he said. Munawar was said to be dating Nazila Sitaishi while he was in the Bigg Boss house. During his time in the house, she broke up with him over Instagram Live. Munawar married Mehzabeen in a private ceremony and did not post any details about it on social media. In fact, days later, the news of his wedding leaked only after one of his fans posted details about the same on their social media. Actor Hina Khan also attended the wedding which led people to believe that Munawar was indeed getting married. During his stay in the Bigg Boss house, Munawar revealed that his ex-wife was already married and he had sole custody of his son.

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