Paradha: A powerful transformative journey questioning archaic practices

Paradha directed by Praveen Kandregula is a much needed social drama in the age of muscular heroes and pan India settings. The end portions do feel somewhat hurried as the resolution needed a more emotional high. Nevertheless Paradha is an important story celebrating feminism and sisterhood. Anupama Parameshwaran gets one of the best written female characters in 2025 and the actress absolutely nails it.

Starcast: Anupama Parameshwaran, Sangeetha, Darshana, Harshvardhan, Rag Mayur, Rajendra Prasad and others

Genre: Social

Story, screenplay and direction: Praveen Kandregula

Producers: Vijay Donkada, Sridhar Makkuva and Sreenivasulu P.V

Production Company: Ananda Media

Music: Gopi Sundar

Cinematography: Mridul Sujit Sen

Running time: 2 hours and 25 minutes

In today’s age of increasing pan masala stories strong women characters with agency is difficult to find. A good example of this are the latest independence day releases both Coolie and War 2. In Coolie Sruthi Hassan plays a perpetual damsel in distress either waiting to be rescued by Rajinikanth or becoming the object for violence. In War 2 Kiara is presented as a tough soldier doing hand to hand combat with Hrithik but the overall characterization leaves a lot to be desired. Having said that you also have films with strong women and these aren’t necessarily female centric. Good examples of these are Patralekha in Phule as Jyotiba Phule’s equal, also Tripti Dimri in Dhadak 2 an upper caste girl who fights for her love and questions the family members pretending to be modern. Also Ananya Pandey in Kesari Chapter 2 as the idealistic Dillret Kaur playing an important role in the courtroom proceedings.

Paradha directed by Praveen Kandregula is a significant addition to this list. The movie broadly tackles the themes of foolish traditions passed from generation to generation ad also the celebration of sisterhood. The film begins with the introduction of a fictional village. In this village all women must be strictly veiled outside the house. A woman who is seen without the paradha is considered to be a bad omen and the punishment for that is death only. This practice is linked to a village deity who is ironically a feisty warrior. Its hard to believe that places like these exist in 2025 but director and writer Praveen Kandregula makes the viewers buy into these archaic scenarios with a convincing build up. Anupama Parameswaran’s Subbalakshmi aka Subbu not surprisingly starts off as a young girl with firm belief in these outdated thoughts thanks to her mother. Things take a huge turn for Subbu when the veil gets blown away due to excessive wind. A wildlife photographer played by Gautham Vasudeva Menon clicks Subbu without her knowledge. On the day of her engagement a magazine with her photograph getting published as the front cover causes absolute mayhem. The rest of the story focuses on how Subbu gets out of this outdated thinking with the help of Sangeeta and Darshana along with a strong bond of sisterhood.

A strong aspect of Paradha is the characterization of these three women. Yes the transformation of Anupama Parameshwaran’s Subbu is the heart of Paradha, at the same time both Sangeeta and Darshana are crucial too with their individual journeys. Sangeeta plays a homemaker called Ratna. Ratna represents numerous homemakers who devote most of their energy and time on their husbands and children. On the other hand Darshana’s Amishti is a civil engineer. In a predominantly male dominated atmosphere Amishti is a rare exception. Amishti is a hugely ambitious woman with a solo focus on reaching top position, she is an Alpha male with a hot temper. Again many young girls/women would connect with the ways of Amishti.

How these three distinct backgrounds play out with their age gaps is very engaging. In the beginning on a trip to Dharmasala Amishti often Chides Subbalakshmi on her thought process which doesn’t go well with Subbu who complains to her aunt Ratna. On certain occasions Ratna becomes a referee between the two younger women.

How Subbu gradually let goes of the veil wearing after a haunting incident packs a strong emotional punch thanks to the powerful acting of Anupama. The conversation between the three women with Ratna and Amishti encouraging her to get out of this blind faith and the need to question practices makes a strong impact.

Paradha is a film which doesn’t completely resort to male bashing. Praveen Kandregula makes important points on how women can also be extremely judgmental about the choices of their fellow tribe. This comes out wonderfully in a sequence involving a woman cop. In a conversation with Amishti this woman talks about her love for shopping, make up and cooking while being a tough police officer. Amishti has a certain disregard for things like these which she considers as an obstacle.

The movie in a gentle but firm manner establishes the need to question practices and in the process bringing a perceptional change. Apart from the dramatic moments the movie also has some chuckle worthy scenes. This primarily includes Harshvardhan as the often exasperated husband unable to manage home duties with his job demands. The conversations between him and Sangeetha as she cooks up stories is a delight to watch. Sangeeta as the homemaker with new found freedom is first rate, specifically in the portion where she changes her voice as an old woman. Darshana as Amishti brings out both the feisty nature and the vulnerability in an impactful manner. Raj Mayur in his brief part as Subbu’s fiancée is good too. Rajendra Prasad in an extended cameo makes his presence amply felt, the scene where he narrates the tale of a bird wanting to discover the world is poignant, it adds to the transformative journey of Subbu.

Paradha ultimately belongs to Anupama Parameswaran. The young actress is a revelation taking on a complex part, she delivers a nuanced performance portraying the vulnerability and the eventual transformation in an excellent manner. Often times Anupama conveys a lot with her body language.

Gopi Sundar’s music goes well with the movie’s tone. Its not of a chartbuster material, nevertheless the songs do a fine job in elevating the key emotional moments. The cinematography of Mridul Sen is of a fine standard, whether its the village portions with the dark tonality or the Himalayan mountains in the latter half. The color pallet goes perfectly with the mood changes.

One of the minor issues with Paradha is the end resolution, its too simplistic lacking the fire specifically considering the build up. Also the three women mostly coming across Telugu speaking population in Dharamsala feels too much of a coincidence.

Final word: Keeping aside the minor niggles Paradha is an important tale of feminism and sisterhood which needs to be celebrated.

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