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30.04.26, 20:30, Mirch Masala (1987)

In a parched village in Gujarat, somewhere in the early 1940s in British colonial India, the landscape is tinged red with dust and ground chillies. Here works the fearless Sonbai, whose refusal to submit sparks a rebellion. When a corrupt tax collector sets his sights on her, Sonbai refuses to be treated as property. Her slap in his face is not only an act of personal defiance, but also the beginning of a collective struggle.

What follows is an escalating power struggle that divides the village. Whilst male village leaders vacillate between fear and opportunism, Sonbai and the other women seek refuge in the factory. Behind its thick walls, they engage in conversations about sex, love and freedom that contrast with the hypocrisy of the men, who place honour and property above all else.

Director Ketan Mehta weaves a gripping village drama with sharp criticism of patriarchal power, caste hierarchy and colonial oppression. Carried by actress Smita Patil, the film unfolds as a passionate parable of resistance in which women, armed with chilli peppers and stubbornness, decide to fight back.

Hetan Mehta, 1987, India & UK, 121 mins, in Hindi with English subtitles
i.c.w. Cinea
Campus Bijloke
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent