If you are looking to revisit or discover one of the most powerful independent Indian films of the last decade,

His reality, however, is a life of abject poverty and social restriction, under the shadow of the local Brahmin landlord, (Sanjay Suri). When Bajrangi helps Santu write a love letter to the girl, it triggers a catastrophic series of events that exposes the village's deep-seated hypocrisy and violence. Key Details

The rain in the village of Gomia didn’t wash things clean; it just turned the dust into a slick, clinging mud that stained everything it touched. Fourteen-year-old Santu sat on the corroded tin roof of the railway station, his legs dangling over the edge, watching the downpour blur the horizon. He was waiting for the train, though he didn't have a ticket.