Fireworks Logo

Latest Trans Additions...

  • RuPaul's Drag Race UK: Season 6
  • Their Own Life
  • Orlando, My Political Biography
  • Hannah Gadsby's Gender Agenda
  • Adam Lambert: Out, Loud and Proud
  • TOPS
  • Sediments
  • Sound of Scars (The)
  • Stand Out: An LGBTQ+ Celebration
  • Law of Love (The)
  • One of the Guys
  • They/Them
  • Anything's Possible
  • Beyond Ed Buck
  • Pronouns in Bio
  • Born in the Wrong Body
  • Girls to Men
  • Gossamer Folds
  • First Fallen (The)
  • Dawn, Her Dad & the Tractor
  • Framing Agnes
  • This is Not Me
  • End of Wonderland (The)
  • Invisible: Gay Women in Southern Music
  • North By Current
  • Manscaping
  • Death and Bowling
  • Garden Left Behind (The)
  • Screw
  • Sort Of
  • Adam
  • Canela
  • Titane
  • Girl Like You
  • Against the Current
  • Wolf
  • Queer Tongues
  • Rūrangi
  • Prince of Dreams
  • Out Loud

Pankh

Country: India, Language: Hindi, 98 mins

  • Director: Sudipto Chattopadhyay
  • Writer: Sudipto Chattopadhyay
  • Producer: Parth Arora; Sanjay Gupta

CGiii Comment

A truly horrific experience...

This is what happens when genres collide with incompetence...a confused, contrived catastrophe.

Arthouse meets Bollywood in a miserable attempt at commercialism...excruciatingly bad.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

PANKH Director's take: Cinema within cinema has always fascinated filmmakers all across the globe. The film industry of each country has characteristics peculiar to their culture. That is what distinguishes them, makes them intriguing and anecdotes associated with each industry in a specific cultural context naturally lend themselves to interesting tales. The story of Baby Kusum is such an intriguing and horrifying tale. It is a story about life imitating art in a grotesque and bizarre way. This film seeks to probe into the mechanism that operates behind the creation of dreams. It highlights a phenomenon that was peculiar and exclusive to the Indian film industry--- the practise of casting children in roles opposite to their natural genders. We have had many instances of young girls being cast as boys in films and vice versa. Their screen names used to be changed to suit the gender they were playing on screen.

Cast & Characters

Bipasha Basu as Nandini;
Lillete Dubey as Mary D'Cunha;
Mahesh Manjrekar as Brahmanand;
Ronit Roy as Peter D'Cunha;
Asha Sachdev as Mrs. Phadnis;
Daya Shankar Pandey;
Kiran Karmarkar; Bharat Kaul;
Johny Bakshi;
Maradona Rebello as Jerry Gabriel D'Cunha / Jai / Baby Kusum