The film masterfully uses silence. The long, empty stares of the mother as she is relegated to a damp, dark servant’s quarter speak louder than any melodramatic dialogue. The director duo doesn't preach; they simply observe. And in that observation, the viewer is forced to look into their own mirror.

⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) – A poignant, heartbreaking, and necessary social drama that defines the conscience of new-age Bengali parallel cinema.

In the vast landscape of Bengali cinema, which often romanticizes the joint family system and the sanctity of filial piety, "Akritagya" stands as a jarring, uncomfortable masterpiece. Directed by the acclaimed Shiboprosad Mukherjee and Nandita Roy (of Praktan and Belaseshe fame), this 2020 film is not a light-hearted entertainer. It is a surgical knife cutting deep into the festering wound of elder neglect in modern urban society.

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