• About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
Donate
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

‘All We Imagine as Light’ Is an Illuminating Sophomore Feature from Filmmaker Payal Kapadia

Jay Liu by Jay Liu
May 30, 2024
in Review
0
Kani Kusruti as Prabha and Divya Prabha as Anu looking into a red cannister in All We Imagine as Light.

Photo Courtesy of Condor Entertainment

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 4 out of 5.

All the buzz surrounding Payal Kapadia’s film All We Imagine as Light is that it is the first Indian film in 30 years to be selected by the Cannes Film Festival in the most prestigious Competition section. That is, of course, a massive disservice, and an unfair pressure to place on the young Kapadia’s sophomore effort. Yet, her beautiful film has weathered these expectations with ease, deservedly taking home the Grand Prix of this year’s Competition. Even though there is still room for refinement, there is no denying Kapadia is bursting with talent.

Set in Mumbai, All We Imagine as Light tracks the lives of three women who have moved from rural villages to work as nurses in the big city. The lead is Prabha (Kani Kusruti), whose husband from an arranged marriage now works in Germany, not having seen each other in a long time. On the contrary is her younger roommate Anu (Divya Prabha), who is defying her parents’ and society’s wishes by dating her Muslim boyfriend Shiaz (Hridhu Haroon) in secret. In her spare time, Prabha helps the elderly, undocumented Parvaty (Chhaya Kadam), who is facing eviction from a gentrification project. The lives of these women intersect as they take on these conflicts.

The above synopsis certainly has the potential for a dramatic soap opera. Kapadia tackles big, hot-button topics of contemporary Indian society almost like they’re off a checklist: Hindu-Muslim relations, arranged marriage, gentrification, the city vs. village divide, etc. Yet she resists the temptation to push those buttons and turn her film into an actual soap opera. Kapadia has no interest in the traditional Hollywood methods of raising stakes and conflict resolution; she knows that her film alone cannot resolve Hindu-Muslim tensions. Instead, she gears her film towards finding solidarity and peacefulness. Where filmmaking norms suggest she should escalate and go bigger, she recedes into beautiful, common solace.

RelatedStories

Connor Storrie as Ilya Rozanov and Hudson Williams as Shane Hollander in bed on the TV series Heated Rivalry.

‘Heated Rivalry’ Changes the TV Romance Game

Machiko Washio as Washio Midori in The Red Spectacles

A Tonal Labyrinth and the Freedom of the Absurd in ‘The Red Spectacles’

Kani Kusruti as Prabha standing holding onto a pole in All We Imagine as Light.
Photo Courtesy of Condor Entertainment

The ambition of the film means it can sometimes feel all over the place. Parvaty’s storyline fighting for her rights certainly feels like an afterthought. A random leftist union scene appears once and is never addressed again. The first act is worryingly weak — after a pretty voice-memos montage that starts the film off, it meanders around for a good 20-30 minutes before firmly establishing the premise. The stylistic influences are varied, too: the city poetry of Mumbai in the first half is akin to Wong Kar-wai’s Hong Kong, Lost in Translation’s Tokyo, and Her’s Shanghai. She successfully conveys the varying vibe and vibrancy of the world’s sixth-most populous city. It has the mark of a young lens too, with text messages prominently plastered across the screen. 

Yet the second half transforms into the slow-cinema mysticism and even magical realism of Apichatpong Weerasethakul, and the two halves don’t gel well. It can feel like Kapadia is trying to tackle too many styles at once. In the name of naturalism, many shots are downright underexposed, and even though one can tell she has great talent and taste, her style needs further refinement to be truly her own.

Still, for a sophomore feature, this is quite the announcement to the stage of international cinema. Cannes took a big risk on young talent, and it paid off. The tenacity of the filmmakers shouldn’t go unmentioned either. All We Imagine as Light starts with the names of literal dozens of worldwide funding bodies, a testament to how difficult it is to make an indie film like this in India. It is even sensually sex-positive feminist, raging against taboo in Indian society (the many critical themes will make a theatrical release unlikely in the film’s home market).

But we aren’t just rewarding Kapadia for the effort. She has intimately captured the strong, complex bond between women of multiple generations, avoiding all the traps of didacticism. In themes, narrative, and style, her film can feel too ambitious and greedy, but that is both the inexperience and, more importantly, hunger of a young filmmaker. As successful as this film already is, it is probably not her masterpiece yet. It may very well be a minor work by a major filmmaker to come.

Now Streaming On

JustWatch

The Review

Tags: All We Imagine as LightCannes 2024Cannes Film FestivalChhaya KadamDivya PrabhaDramaEditor PickHridhu HaroonIndiaKani KusrutiPayal Kapadia
ShareTweet
Jay Liu

Jay Liu

Proudly hailing from the embattled city of Hong Kong, Jay Liu tells stories of queer romance and domestic realism. He is a recent alumnus of the USC School of Cinematic Arts with an MFA in Film/TV Production. His thesis film, “Anywhere the Wind Blows,” has been selected by festivals like Los Angeles Asian Pacific and the American Pavilion Emerging Filmmakers Showcase at the Cannes Film Festival. He also writes about film and culture, with bylines in Collider, Cinema Escapist, and USC x Cannes Classics. He is an alumnus of Northwestern University.

Recommended For You

Photo still from Boong
Review

TIFF 2024: ‘Boong’ Shines as a Promising Directorial Debut

Photo still from Powai.
Review

MISAFF 2023: ‘Powai’ Falters in the Follow-Through of Its Effigial Intentions

Han Gi-chan, Youn Yuh-jung, and Kelly Marie Tran in The Wedding Banquet.
Review

‘The Wedding Banquet’ Is Less Feast, More Cosy Potluck

Shafiq Syed as Krishna looking into a car in Salaam Bombay!
Essay

‘Salaam Bombay!’: Capturing Life Imitating Art

January 19, 2025
Pálmi Kormákur stars as Young Kristofer and Kōki as Young Miko in director Baltasar Kormákur’s TOUCH, a Focus Features release.
Interview

Kōki Discusses Her Latest Film ‘Touch’ & Joining the Family Business

July 12, 2024
Salome Demuria as Medea walking down a snowy street in The Antique.
News

Georgia’s 2024 Oscar Submission ‘The Antique’ Is Coming to Film Movement+

July 29, 2025
Next Post
Zhang Ziyi as an abused Zhan Zhou in She's Got No Name

Cannes 2024: Not Even Zhang Ziyi Can Save 'She's Got No Name'

Popular Stories

Jacky Heung as Shen sitting down staring at the hilt of a dagger in the movie 100 Yards.

TIFF 2023: ‘100 Yards’ Is A Flawed Yet Creatively Charged Kung Fu Epic

A close up of Bernard White as Vijay and Saamer Usmani as Ashish staring straight ahead puzzled in Shook

Bernard White Shakes Up the Industry with ‘Shook’: “This younger generation doesn’t take shit”

7 months ago
A Retrospect of ‘Spirited Away’: Miyazaki’s Masterpiece Where Whim and Wisdom Collide

A Retrospect of ‘Spirited Away’: Miyazaki’s Masterpiece Where Whim and Wisdom Collide

2 years ago
Gary Jumawan in Boy From Nowhere

‘Boy From Nowhere’ Is a Compelling Marriage of Fiction and Reality

Photo still from The Braid.

‘The Braid’ Is a Challenging Disappointment

  • About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Write For Us
  • Contact

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use