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From 'Luck By Chance' to 'Gully Boy,' why filmmaker Zoya Akhtar's cinema matters and remains relevant

FP Entertainment Desk October 14, 2025, 18:22:00 IST

From Luck By Chance to Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, Dil Dhadakne Do, Gully Boy, and her more recent work in Made in Heaven, Zoya has built a cinematic universe rooted in contradiction

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From 'Luck By Chance' to 'Gully Boy,' why filmmaker Zoya Akhtar's cinema matters and remains relevant

Today, on Zoya Akhtar’s birthday, it’s the perfect moment to reflect not just on her filmography, but on why her voice in Indian cinema continues to resonate so deeply — perhaps now more than ever.

Zoya Akhtar doesn’t just tell stories; she invites us into emotionally rich, socially nuanced worlds where privilege, pain, and personal discovery coexist with striking honesty. At a time when Bollywood often defaults to formula, spectacle, or superficiality, her films offer something far rarer: complexity, authenticity, and courage.

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From Luck By Chance to Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, Dil Dhadakne Do, Gully Boy, and her more recent work in Made in Heaven, Zoya has built a cinematic universe rooted in contradiction — where beauty and brokenness often share the same frame. Her narratives are sophisticated yet accessible, artful but never alienating.

What makes her work especially urgent today is her ability to interrogate privilege without rejecting it — to show characters grappling with their inherited status, their internal voids, and their longing to redefine their identities in a rapidly changing world. In Gully Boy, we saw the voice of the underdog rise through systemic inequality; in Dil Dhadakne Do, we witnessed the dysfunction that hides behind wealth and power. And through it all, Zoya’s camera doesn’t judge — it observes, dissects, and humanizes.

In a cultural climate increasingly polarized and performative, Zoya’s cinema reminds us that storytelling can still be subtle and layered, and that empathy doesn’t need to be loud to be revolutionary.

She also continues to be one of the few female directors in Indian mainstream cinema consistently working on her own terms — building characters, especially women, who are flawed, funny, fierce, and unforgettable. Her work behind the scenes, creating platforms like Tiger Baby Films, is equally vital — opening doors for diverse narratives and new voices.

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Zoya Akhtar’s cinema matters because it dares to look within, when much of the world is obsessed with the external. It invites us to sit with discomfort, to laugh at ourselves, to listen more closely, and to understand that the most powerful journeys often begin with self-awareness.

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