To believe entertainment floats above the filmmaker’s worldview is like thinking a pomegranate won’t stain white linen—it’s naive. A political film’s sacred anatomy rarely makes it out intact under the scalpel of the censor board. Yet, political films aren’t always made with the intent to tell stories of the oppressed; they’re often custom-written to flatter power, ideology, and the right kind of applause. That is not to say there’s a dearth of filmmakers who kept their ethos intact to still make earnest films about the marginalised: Nagraj Manjule, Vetrimaaran, Pa Ranjith and Neeraj Ghaywan remain a few of those greats. The cost of making films in a country that censors its own struggles remains steep and unforgiving. Sandhya Suri’s Santosh (2024) and Honey Trehan’s Punjab 95 (2025) dare to expose misogyny, casteism, Islamophobia, and police brutality and yet, the CBFC stands as a corrupt watchdog, filtering content pandering to the government and silencing dissent alike.