'Bad Girl': Varsha Bharath and Anjali Sivaraman on Facing Backlash and The Burden of Female Storytelling

Director Varsha Bharath and actor Anjali Sivaraman speak about the response to 'Bad Girl' and the battle for representation

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: SEP 04, 2025, 12:13 IST|5 min read
Varsha Bharath and Anjali Sivaraman
Varsha Bharath and Anjali Sivaraman

When the teaser of Bad Girl dropped, the noise was almost immediate. What should have been a moment of excitement for debut filmmaker Varsha Bharath and her lead actor Anjali Sivaraman quickly spiralled into a storm of online backlash. The film was accused of “misguiding women,” of misrepresenting communities, and of being provocative for the sake of it.

Anjali points out that these reactions came from people who hadn’t seen the film. “This is their reaction just based off a teaser. They don’t know what the film is about. They haven’t watched the movie. So they’re just making up theories,” she says in an exclusive conversation with The Hollywood Reporter India.

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For Anjali, who has long navigated the public eye, the answer was to switch off. “I didn’t pay attention. I didn’t read anything. If I did, it was because a family member sent it to me. Everyone’s entitled to their opinions. But I’ll listen to them only after they have watched the film.”

Varsha, though, admits the barrage was harder to handle. “She [Anjali] is a lot more stoic when these things happen because she’s dealt with it before. For me, it was a little scary,” the filmmaker shares. “We all live in our little woke bubbles, with like-minded people. I knew the film would be controversial to some, but the kind of things they were saying was just… wild. And they were saying it in the name of protecting women. Which makes no sense.”

Beneath the outrage lies a more telling truth: the discomfort wasn’t really with the story, but with who was telling it. “If you replace the female protagonist with a male, this would be a very masala movie,” Varsha notes. “So the only reason why this is niche, and why it’s controversial, is because it’s about a woman. And I’ve wondered at festivals—is my film only here because I am a woman?”

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Despite the firestorm, the global response to Bad Girl has been affirming. Just two days after the teaser went live, the film premiered at Rotterdam, where the mood was strikingly different. “When everybody was shaming us online, we were out there having fun,” Varsha laughs. “After listening to people’s reactions and having so many thank us for the experience, I realised—they just have to wait to watch the movie. Then make an opinion.”

For both, the controversy has become less about a single project and more about the larger conversation around female creators. As Varsha puts it, “It’s not just about having female filmmakers—it’s about us speaking our truth and telling our stories. But when we do, why is there such a problem with it? Because this would be such a non-controversial film if it were a man.”

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