‘To Kill a Tiger’ documentary review: Dare to Fight

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'To Kill a Tiger' documentary review: Dare to Fight



If I do nothing, I’ll never be able to face those men,” says Ranjit in the Oscar-nominated documentary To Kill a Tiger, directed by Nisha Pahuja. The film, which details the disturbing story of 13-year-old Kiran (name changed), a gang-rape survivor in Jharkhand’s Bero district, and her father Ranjit, speaks of their relentless pursuit of justice—and there’s so much more than what meets the eye. Kiran, now a major in the documentary, consents to showing her face, so she can stand in support of girls like her.Nisha, who has made this film over a span of three years, charts out the lives of the marginalised farmer and his daughter, and their trials and tribulations through court proceedings, police cases and activist meetings, to bring the assaulters to justice. Cinematographer Mrinal Desai turns the camera to show the stigma surrounding rape survivors in a village—the girl is constantly shamed, and her family ostracised. Marriage to the offenders is openly suggested as a solution despite the existence of Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO) laws, and the documentary shows how women too are upholders of patriarchy.To Kill a Tiger is as much Ranjit’s story as it is Kiran’s. The man carries a mountain of guilt of not being able to be a protector figure. Even when hopes are bleak and savings run dry, he pushes on. Beneath the quiet person, lies a vulnerable heart that hopes to bring back happiness to the lives of his children.



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