DMovies - Your platform for thought-provoking cinema

Film review search

The fields "country of origin" and "actor" were created in May 2023, and the results are limited to after this date.
Precocious Indian girl searches for "the perfect man", in this enjoyable comedy and riff on existential darkness - from the 25th REC Tarragona International Film Festival

Love manifests itself in many different ways: it stems from urges, lust and a desire to impart change. Ramya is determined to find her “perfect guy”, even though she adheres to the rules and wills of a strict family in Southern India. Not one to shy away from the perfect challenge, Ramya discovers the person who may fulfil the emptiness in her soul and heart. As a comedy, director Varsha Bharath focuses on colour and charm to guide the viewer through this rivetting tale.

Bad Girl is shot in a dream-like style, angles embodying the vastness of the terrain and the extraordinary use of dimension within the nation. The movie ripples with hues and energy, earmarking a younger, more infectious look at the world’s most populous country. In every corner of the world, there are adolescents bursting to move away from their less progressive parents for groovier, personal terrains.

Bharath’s choice to cast Anjali Sivaraman in the lead is a superlative one. Her smile is a combination of jollity, insecurity and general innocence: a youth looking for the beauty in the world. Unable to conceal the boredom of a first day back in school, Ramya showcases a genuine aptitude for bonhomie and adventure. Like passengers in time, the inhabitants of Tamil Nadu go about their daily business; surviving, not living. Eager to embody what little time she has on this earth, Ramya throws herself into love with a fervency that’s comparable to a hunter searching for a prize animal.

Experiencing trippy dreams, she likens one coital experience to a near life & death excursion. “Felt like you”, Ramya tells the naked man in her bed. “I was a bird or a fish of some kind, and you had cut me open, and were tattooing your way into my heart”, she concludes. The act of love is more than a physical exercise for this person, but a metamorphosis from one state of mind into another. She’s in a state of vulnerability, her breasts at hand to the man beside her. Early acts of coitus are tinged with nerves: ecstatic, energetic and insecure. It’s all there, dotted on Sivaraman’s portrayal.

There are philosophical points at play, particularly in the central character’s internal monologue. “How can I go from a life of dreaming?”, she inquires privately to herself, between a schedule of study, sincerity and sex. The movie could just as easily have been named Ramya’s Life given that everything is witnessed through her eyes. Behind her comes a soundtrack of tablas and flutes, externalising the nuanced gestures for the viewers in the theatres. When she feels ill, the camera shakes, waves shaking at the corners of the screen.

The mother isn’t keen on her child’s development. “She calls us toxic,” the parent mutters, her head flitting furiously from side to side.Ultimately, this woman just wants the best for her child, fearing the safety of the environment for such a young person. Bad Girl dwells in the terrain of existential darkness. An elderly woman chastises Ramya for a “filthy period” . Her grades are a product of a thorough mind, and a stable lifestyle; and then there are the pals who barely conceal their boredom whenever the eponymous heroine asks what it is that she lacks.

The world of Bad Girl is a complicated one, even if it superficially fits into the box of comedic adventure. Although it has its challenges, Ramya’s existence is one she pursues with aplomb.

Bad Girl shows in the 25th edition of the REC Tarragona International Film Festival.


By Eoghan Lyng - 04-12-2025

Throughout a journey found through his own writings and the writings of other filmmakers, Eoghan has taken to the spirit of the surreal to find greater meaning from the real. He finds it far easier to...

Film review search

The fields "country of origin" and "actor" were created in May 2023, and the results are limited to after this date.

interview

Nataliia Serebriakova interviews the directors of "traumatising" children's [Read More...]

1

Paul Risker interviews the co-director, writer and actress [Read More...]

2

Paul Risker interviews the director of the generational [Read More...]

3

Nataliia Serebriakova interviews the German director of observational [Read More...]

4

Victoria Luxford interviews the first woman director from [Read More...]

5

David Lynch's longtime friend and producer talks about [Read More...]

6

DMovies' editor Victor Fraga interviews the woman at [Read More...]

7

Eoghan Lyng interviews the director of family/terrorist drama [Read More...]

8

Read More

Our dirty questions to Carolyn and Andy London

 

Nataliia Serebriakova - 04-02-2026

Nataliia Serebriakova interviews the directors of "traumatising" children's birthday party drama 1981; they discuss the Reagan years, music as a time portal, memory loops, making sense of absurdity, and much more [Read More...]

First Days

Michael Karrer, Kim Allamand
2026

Daniel Theophanous - 01-02-2026

Two Swiss filmmakers meditate on mortality, in this sensory and experimental movie - from the 55th international Film Festival Rotterdam [Read More...]

Why Do I See You in Everything?

Rand Abou Fakher
2026

André Vital Pardue - 01-02-2026

Two Syrian friends reframe archive images of protests as intimate reveries, in this micro-budget film about political defiance - from the 55th International Film Festival Rotterdam [Read More...]