The girl whom no one did notice.
Anurag Kashyap is one of the best Indian directors, who constantly portrays realism in a raw and gritty way more casual than other Bollywood films. With this form of approach, Anurag has effectively created a cult-like popularity for himself. Even although his recent movies are more straightforward than his early work, one can’t deny his potential as a director. During some of his more successful Bollywood endeavours, he tried bold, offbeat movies like “No Smoking,” "Dev D" and “Gulaal.” Though these movies won a cult popularity over time, his 2010 directorial project "That Girl in Yellow Boots' ' went pretty ignored by the audience.
She stated much of her personality is based totally on her journey as a White woman growing up in India. Whites are seen with curved eyes by society, and for that they pretty alienate themselves from it. And this is not only to the White women; this is confronted by each and every girl living in this male dominated society. So, right here Ruth is not so much an individual; she represents an entire community and their existential crisis in a world dominated by patriarchy and objectification.
We eventually get to see what happens when any person tips that fragile statue a bit too far. What happens when Ruth falls is perhaps anticlimactic, however somehow more plausible than what some other filmmaker might have of the circumstances, and that is one of this film's strengths. That 'Girl in Yellow Boots' seeks not to sensationalise, in spite of the seedy settings, but to take an ordinary woman to exceptional extremes and see how much she can take.