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In Rohan Sen's 'Kanya,' long-estranged sisters Sudipa and Sukanya reunite due to their father's illness, stirring up a decade of buried resentments. Sudipa confronts her ex-husband, Surojit, now married to Sukanya, igniting a complex web of love, guilt, and betrayal. As they navigate their shared past, the film explores whether forgiveness and healing are possible amidst deep-seated family wounds.
Priyanka Sarkar, Rishi Kaushik, Biswanath Basu, Biswajit Chakraborty play pivotal characters in Kanya, directed by Rohan Sen. After ten long years, the sisters finally stood under the same roof again. The old house smelled of medicines and silence, their father’s illness pulling them together against fate’s cruel irony.
Sudipa, the elder, walked in first—hesitant, her eyes carrying the weight of betrayals and unfinished battles. And then, from across the hallway, Sukanya appeared. Younger, radiant, but with a trace of guilt flickering in her eyes. Behind her stood Surojit—Sudipa’s ex-husband, now Sukanya’s husband. The room tightened with unsaid words.For Sudipa, the sight was like reopening a wound she had tried for years to stitch closed.
For Sukanya, it was a daily struggle between love and remorse. And for Surojit, it was punishment enough to face both women who knew him inside out—one who had loved and lost him, and another who loved him now. The father’s shallow breath filled the silence, reminding them why they were here. Perhaps destiny wanted them to confront not just illness but also themselves.
"Would Sudipa forgive? Would Sukanya confess her choices without shame? Would Surojit crumble under the gaze of the past is this film all about," said Priyanka. The answers waited in the days to come, as the sisters slowly learned that family ties, however bruised, run deeper than scars—and sometimes, healing begins where confrontation ends.
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