IMDb RATING
6.6/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
When a gifted 9-year-old girl, who works in a garment factory, is offered a once-in-a-lifetime chance to attend school, she is forced to make a heart-wrenching decision that will determine h... Read allWhen a gifted 9-year-old girl, who works in a garment factory, is offered a once-in-a-lifetime chance to attend school, she is forced to make a heart-wrenching decision that will determine her and her sister's fate.When a gifted 9-year-old girl, who works in a garment factory, is offered a once-in-a-lifetime chance to attend school, she is forced to make a heart-wrenching decision that will determine her and her sister's fate.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 5 wins & 1 nomination total
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- Writer
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Featured reviews
An exceptional short that focuses on child labour in India. The writing was so good from the starting point until the last shot. The ending is left for us to choose what Anuja should do. Obviously she should go attend that exam. That moment could be life changing.
This short also depicts sisterhood, moral agency and difficult choices born of poverty.
The Cinematography of this short creates a very authentic visual that is raw and natural. Kudos to Akash Raje.
The acting performances were top-notch. Sajda Pathan was outstanding. A real-life former child laborer discovered by the Salaam Baalak Trust. Huge respect. Ananya Shanbhag was amazing too. A real-life factory worker. Huge respect to her too.
Excellent short but the ending could have been straight forward though so that many people get motivated from it.
This short also depicts sisterhood, moral agency and difficult choices born of poverty.
The Cinematography of this short creates a very authentic visual that is raw and natural. Kudos to Akash Raje.
The acting performances were top-notch. Sajda Pathan was outstanding. A real-life former child laborer discovered by the Salaam Baalak Trust. Huge respect. Ananya Shanbhag was amazing too. A real-life factory worker. Huge respect to her too.
Excellent short but the ending could have been straight forward though so that many people get motivated from it.
I think it's important that people from the west see movies or stories like this. Not to feel sorry or superior but It gives a better understanding of the life of poor people in India. For many people here in the west it's very hard to understand why the people are in a situation like this and stories like this help to get an idea of true life India and how hard it can be for the not fortunate ones. Helping the poor in India might increase if more people with money and a conscience would understand. Thank you for this movie and your awesome work. All the best to the organisation and its protégés!
Road to the Oscars 2025: this is nominated in 1 category best short film.
Anuja was a charming look into a sad truth. Knowing that this is real and that a foundation that helps people like Anuja exist makes you think about how our world is designed. Nonetheless we get a charming little slice of life movie with a great ending.
2 sisters who lost their parents work at a bag factory. One of the sisters are given the opportunity to start in school for only 400 rupees. The sisters try to get the money.
I really liked the cute and believable sisterhood in this movie. Anuja and Palak act believable for their age and their relation and that helps the movie a lot. This is also just a well-made film through and through.
This is a hard truth movie. While it is packed with optimism as you kind of have to in a situation like this, it is hard to think that this is something that happens every day.
I really liked the open ended ending of this movie. Really showing the complexity of the situation the sisters are in. This is not just a moral easy question, it´s hard because you know what the cost is for all the lives involved and if that is something that happens every day it´s hard.
Overall I was charmed by this short. It´s well made and good. It is the most clean Oscar film I have watched so far, but somehow that works for it. It´s nothing insane or special, just competent.
Oscar Predictions: Political undertones, check. When it comes to the academy they like to make a political statement with their choice sometimes and in this case this check a box, but shorts like "A lien"(2022) and "I´m not a robot"(2023) dies the same with a more pro what we want in America angel. This is the winner so far to me. The most clean of the short, pure Oscar bait but it works and it´s good. I root for this!
Anuja was a charming look into a sad truth. Knowing that this is real and that a foundation that helps people like Anuja exist makes you think about how our world is designed. Nonetheless we get a charming little slice of life movie with a great ending.
2 sisters who lost their parents work at a bag factory. One of the sisters are given the opportunity to start in school for only 400 rupees. The sisters try to get the money.
I really liked the cute and believable sisterhood in this movie. Anuja and Palak act believable for their age and their relation and that helps the movie a lot. This is also just a well-made film through and through.
This is a hard truth movie. While it is packed with optimism as you kind of have to in a situation like this, it is hard to think that this is something that happens every day.
I really liked the open ended ending of this movie. Really showing the complexity of the situation the sisters are in. This is not just a moral easy question, it´s hard because you know what the cost is for all the lives involved and if that is something that happens every day it´s hard.
Overall I was charmed by this short. It´s well made and good. It is the most clean Oscar film I have watched so far, but somehow that works for it. It´s nothing insane or special, just competent.
Oscar Predictions: Political undertones, check. When it comes to the academy they like to make a political statement with their choice sometimes and in this case this check a box, but shorts like "A lien"(2022) and "I´m not a robot"(2023) dies the same with a more pro what we want in America angel. This is the winner so far to me. The most clean of the short, pure Oscar bait but it works and it´s good. I root for this!
Has it got a good message? Yeah, kind of. Does it move me to act upon it? Not really. The movie is powerful for a 23-minute runtime, but it is not powerful enough to stir me. It is rather minimal and pretty in its own little way, but nothing honestly stood out to me about the work. It ends posing a dilemma-a rather huge one at that-but the rest of it? Bland. At least to me it was.
The acting is pretty fine. The characters portrayed have some depth. The screenplay is quite intelligent, to which the shots do sufficient justice. It wouldn't be a "10/10 I recommend," but one could give it a chance.
The acting is pretty fine. The characters portrayed have some depth. The screenplay is quite intelligent, to which the shots do sufficient justice. It wouldn't be a "10/10 I recommend," but one could give it a chance.
"Anuja" is a short film that, even with its brief 23 minutes, manages to leave a deep mark. It doesn't rely on big speeches or melodrama to make an impact; it trusts the strength of its simple narrative and the authenticity of the emotions it carries. What makes it so powerful is precisely that simplicity: by focusing on the relationship between two orphaned sisters working in a garment factory, it creates an intimate, honest portrait of the fight for survival in a world where childhood is a luxury few can afford.
The film's biggest strength lies in how it builds the bond between Anuja (Sajda Pathan) and Palak (Ananya Shanbhag). Their dynamic feels genuine, full of small gestures that reveal the affection and deep connection they share, even in the face of adversity. It's in the little things-the joy of sharing a jalebi, the excitement when talking about movies, the quiet care woven into the harsh routine of the factory-that the story gains depth. Their relationship isn't idealized; it's raw, real, built on sacrifices and tough choices, which makes the drama hit even harder. Pathan and Shanbhag's performances are stunning, especially considering they come from outside the professional acting world. They carry the film with a natural ease that avoids the trap of over-rehearsed performances, making the pain and hope of their characters feel almost tangible.
Narratively, "Anuja" makes an interesting choice by focusing more on the protagonist's internal conflict rather than on big external confrontations. The factory supervisor, while clearly an antagonist, isn't portrayed as a caricature. He's less of a standalone villain and more of a symbol of a system that keeps the cycle of poverty and exploitation going. The real struggle is inside Anuja's mind: choosing between an uncertain future full of possibilities or the fragile security of the present, where she can stay close to her sister. The film never forces an answer on the viewer, which is one of its greatest strengths. The open ending isn't lazy storytelling; on the contrary, it forces the audience to carry that choice with them, reflecting on the weight of decisions that many children are forced to make every day.
Visually, the film embraces a restrained, almost documentary-like aesthetic. The camera stays close, with minimal movement and simple compositions, which reinforces the intimate tone. The color palette is muted, reflecting the oppressive environment of the factory, but there are moments when the warmth of natural light-like in outdoor scenes or when the sisters share small moments of joy-hints at a spark of hope amid the harshness of daily life. This minimalist approach keeps the film from slipping into visual sensationalism that could undercut the story's emotional weight. The realism is there to serve the narrative, not to glamorize the suffering.
What also stands out is how the script handles the theme of child labor. "Anuja" isn't a film trying to deliver an obvious moral lesson or offer simplistic solutions to a complex problem. It shows, without filters, how the system fails these children-but it does so through their lived experience, not from some distant, condescending viewpoint. The specific focus-the tension between the right to education and the need to work-is universal, but it never feels generic. Every decision, every line of dialogue feels grounded in the concrete reality of these characters, making the story both specific and universally relatable.
Ultimately, there's something profoundly human in how the film deals with the idea of hope. Instead of presenting it as some abstract concept or an easy reward, "Anuja" shows hope as a difficult choice, one that demands courage and, often, sacrifice. It's a film that embodies the kind of cinema that understands emotional impact doesn't come from grand gestures, but from the honesty with which a story is told. That said, "Anuja" is a reminder that cinema can be powerful even when it whispers-and that sometimes, the smallest films carry the loudest voices.
The film's biggest strength lies in how it builds the bond between Anuja (Sajda Pathan) and Palak (Ananya Shanbhag). Their dynamic feels genuine, full of small gestures that reveal the affection and deep connection they share, even in the face of adversity. It's in the little things-the joy of sharing a jalebi, the excitement when talking about movies, the quiet care woven into the harsh routine of the factory-that the story gains depth. Their relationship isn't idealized; it's raw, real, built on sacrifices and tough choices, which makes the drama hit even harder. Pathan and Shanbhag's performances are stunning, especially considering they come from outside the professional acting world. They carry the film with a natural ease that avoids the trap of over-rehearsed performances, making the pain and hope of their characters feel almost tangible.
Narratively, "Anuja" makes an interesting choice by focusing more on the protagonist's internal conflict rather than on big external confrontations. The factory supervisor, while clearly an antagonist, isn't portrayed as a caricature. He's less of a standalone villain and more of a symbol of a system that keeps the cycle of poverty and exploitation going. The real struggle is inside Anuja's mind: choosing between an uncertain future full of possibilities or the fragile security of the present, where she can stay close to her sister. The film never forces an answer on the viewer, which is one of its greatest strengths. The open ending isn't lazy storytelling; on the contrary, it forces the audience to carry that choice with them, reflecting on the weight of decisions that many children are forced to make every day.
Visually, the film embraces a restrained, almost documentary-like aesthetic. The camera stays close, with minimal movement and simple compositions, which reinforces the intimate tone. The color palette is muted, reflecting the oppressive environment of the factory, but there are moments when the warmth of natural light-like in outdoor scenes or when the sisters share small moments of joy-hints at a spark of hope amid the harshness of daily life. This minimalist approach keeps the film from slipping into visual sensationalism that could undercut the story's emotional weight. The realism is there to serve the narrative, not to glamorize the suffering.
What also stands out is how the script handles the theme of child labor. "Anuja" isn't a film trying to deliver an obvious moral lesson or offer simplistic solutions to a complex problem. It shows, without filters, how the system fails these children-but it does so through their lived experience, not from some distant, condescending viewpoint. The specific focus-the tension between the right to education and the need to work-is universal, but it never feels generic. Every decision, every line of dialogue feels grounded in the concrete reality of these characters, making the story both specific and universally relatable.
Ultimately, there's something profoundly human in how the film deals with the idea of hope. Instead of presenting it as some abstract concept or an easy reward, "Anuja" shows hope as a difficult choice, one that demands courage and, often, sacrifice. It's a film that embodies the kind of cinema that understands emotional impact doesn't come from grand gestures, but from the honesty with which a story is told. That said, "Anuja" is a reminder that cinema can be powerful even when it whispers-and that sometimes, the smallest films carry the loudest voices.
Did you know
- Crazy creditsThe title doesn't appear until the 5-minute mark.
Details
- Runtime
- 22m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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