Date Showing Showing On 24, 26, 27 March
Time Showing Monday 6pm, Wednesday 4pm and Thursday 6pm

ALL WE IMAGINE AS LIGHT

M 1hrs 58mins
drama | 2024, India | Malayalam, Hindi, Marathi
Overview

In Mumbai, Nurse Prabha's routine is troubled when she receives an unexpected gift from her estranged husband. Her younger roommate, Anu, tries in vain to find a spot in the city to be intimate with her boyfriend. A trip to a beach town allows them to find a space for their desires to manifest.

Warnings

A sex scene and occasional coarse language

Director
Payal Kapadia
Original Review
Wendy Ide, Guardian
Extracted By
Gail Bendall
Featuring
Kani Kusruti, Divya Prabha, Chhaya Kadam

Watch The Trailer

ALL WE IMAGINE AS LIGHT - Official US Trailer

Storyline (warning: spoilers)

Payal Kapadia’s poetic, everyday tale of three women who work at the same hospital is all the more remarkable for being her fiction feature debut. Mumbai is more than a city. It’s an ever-expanding universe. Night shots of the thronged streets in this exquisite, Cannes prize-winning drama by Mumbai-born documentary director turned fiction film-maker Payal Kapadia show the skyline as a shimmering constellation of lights. And behind each flickering window, inside every snaking commuter train, there is a whole world with its own myriad of stories. It’s an idea that Kapadia acknowledges with elegant simplicity at the film’s opening, using documentary techniques, a montage of street scenes and the voices of migrants from around the country drawn to the city for work.
Having captured the teeming collision of lives, she gently guides us to follow three of them. Nurse Prabha (Kani Kusruti) is a veteran at the busy urban hospital where all three work; her younger colleague Anu (Divya Prabha), newly arrived from the south of India, is caught up in the first thrill of romance with her Muslim boyfriend. And Pavarty (Chhaya Kadam), a cook in the hospital kitchen, is facing eviction from a home that is due to be demolished to sate the voracious appetite of gentrification. The women speak different languages – Prabha and Anu converse in Malayalam; Hindi and Marathi are also used. These are ordinary lives, with small sadnesses, twinging regrets and sparks of joy. But through Kapadia’s empathetic lens we realise that these women, like the city that never entirely feels like home, contain multitudes.
Prabha’s unflappable composure has been disturbed by an unexpected anonymous gift – a rice cooker that may be from her estranged husband in Germany. Anu, meanwhile, is frustrated by the challenge of carving out private time with her boyfriend. Pavarty, recently widowed, has no documentation to prove that she has lived in her home, and thus no rights. In the second half of the film, when the women leave Mumbai to accompany Pavarty back to her coastal village, the skies lift, the air clears and the picture takes on a dreamlike quality. It’s a marvel of a movie.

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