At the Angelika Film Center this week, I went to see Sister Midnight, a 2024 black comedy written and directed by Karan Kandhari. The film stars Radhika Apte as Uma, a young Indian woman who is dragged into an arranged marriage with Gopal (Ashok Pathak), someone she had only briefly met when they were kids, and they live in a shack on a busy street in Mumbai, with hardly any privacy between them and a mattress on the floor to sleep on, and she is clueless on being a homemaker or how to connect with her husband. Her husband will be away all day working, and she'll be sitting at home, bored out of her mind. Or Uma will struggle with cooking, go to her neighbor Sheetal (Chhaya Kadam), and Sheetal will teach her the basics of cooking rice, throwing big chunks of vegetables in it to make her man happy, and soaking lentils, and be like, "The rest you have to figure out yourself."
Uma will argue with Gopal, who will come off as awkward, being as clueless as she is as to how to make a marriage and a life with a stranger, and be berated by her and not knowing what to say back. Uma is mad that she is expected to be a housewife with a lack of domestic skills, and that Gopal doesn't challenge her right back and acts immature and childish, which makes her more contemptuous of him.
Uma decides to go get a job to get out of the home and try to escape her boredom, and she gets a job as a night cleaner in a building, developing a quiet friendship with the elevator operator. When she asks why he looks so sad, he goes, "God painted my face this way." She travels far for her job, both riding halfway on the elevator operator's bike and walking. She gets greeted by women in her neighborhood who initially seem to be mocking her, calling her "hey, cutie," and asking what whitening cream she uses, but eventually she sits with them and finds that they are just normal, regular women. She will also keep feeling sick, not eating, and looking pale (hence the colorism comments), but then be dismissed by the doctor for just having a "stomach bug," and not getting any real help for her obvious problems.
With Uma's frustration in her life, she develops peculiar behaviors, descends into feral psychotic hallucinations, and the film takes much more of a horror comedy turn, and I liked how goofy and weird it got, and how it just kept going with it. The film has a bit of a Wes Anderson feel with the camera blocking and set design, and has a rock and pop soundtrack of The Band's "The Weight" and music by Buddy Holly and Motorhead.
I really liked Apte's performance, in how Uma looks pissed for a lot of the movie, and is unhinged, vulnerable, and feels lost in her life. There are scenes where there is a lot of busy things going on in the background, with people and cars and vendors, which makes Uma look confused and out of place, a misfit in her surroundings.
I went into this blind, not wanting to know too much about the plot, and I really enjoyed how it felt realistic and relatable for the first half with the misfit couple feeling isolated, then it got more bonkers and weird to watch and I got into that too. So I'm happy that I checked this out.