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For Indian women filmmakers ‘our time has come’, says Laapataa Ladies director Kiran Rao

Director of wife-swapping comedy Laapataa Ladies (Lost Ladies), Indian Oscars entry, hails ‘special moment’ for South Asian women filmmakers

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A still from Laapataa Ladies (Lost Ladies), directed by Kiran Rao, India’s entry for the 2025 best international film Oscar. With films by two other South Asian women filmmakers in the running, Rao says “our time has come”.

Despite Bollywood’s worldwide popularity, the mammoth Hindi-language film industry has made barely a dent in Hollywood’s Academy Awards, with just 10 Indian Oscar wins since 1957.

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Kiran Rao is hoping to change that with Lost Ladies – India’s official entry for best international film in 2025 – which she said comes at a “special moment” for South Asian cinema centring women’s stories.

Only three Indian entries in the category have been nominated and none has won.

The last entry to be nominated was the 2001 film Lagaan. Rao was an assistant director on that epic, while the lead role was played by her ex-husband, Aamir Khan, who was a producer of Lost Ladies.
“We’ve seen a lot more participation from Asia at the Oscars,” Rao said in London recently, referring to triumphs for South Korea’s Parasite and Malaysian actress Michelle Yeoh’s best actress win for Everything Everywhere All at Once.
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