The nationwide momentum around HAQ has officially positioned the film as one of the year’s most significant social-justice successes both critically and commercially.
With its continued performance and cultural traction, HAQ demonstrates that women-led, rights-focus on narratives that are culturally urgent.
Produced by Junglee Pictures, in association with Insomnia Films and Baweja Studios, HAQ extends the studio’s long-standing commitment to socially impactful storytelling. Starring Yami Gautam Dhar and Emraan Hashmi, the film’s gripping courtroom narrative has struck a nationwide chord, igniting conversations across audience segments, media circles, and policy spaces alike. The film is Directed by Suparn S Varma and written by Reshu Nath.
HAQ now enters the landscape shaped by women centered successes and films that proved that authentic, grounded stories can deliver both emotional resonance and broad commercial reach:
1. Laapataa Ladies
This film uses humane humor and gentle satire to tell the story of two young brides who get accidentally swapped on a train. It subtly and powerfully champions female agency and identity by exploring the lives of women who once lost, find an unexpected opportunity for self-discovery outside the confines of patriarchy.
2. Jigra
This film centre’s around the fierce, protective bond between a sister and her younger brother. The plot is driven by the sister’s dangerous and unwavering resolve to rescue her brother when he is wrongfully imprisoned and sentenced to death in a foreign country with strict laws. It highlights the lengths a woman will go to for her family.
3. Mrs. Chatterjee vs Norway
This film is based on a true story about an Indian mother whose children are taken away by the Norwegian Child Welfare Services due to cultural differences in parenting. It is a powerful narrative of a mother’s relentless, global fight against a foreign system to reclaim her children highlighting the trauma of cultural alienation and bureaucratic insensitivity.
4. Panga
A heartwarming sports drama centered on a former Kabaddi world champion, now a loving wife and mother, who decides to stage a comeback to the sport years after retiring. The film celebrates a woman’s ambition, identity, and the importance of a supportive family that enables her to chase her deferred dreams.
5. Thappad
A cultural milestone that confronts the normalization of domestic violence, even in its most subtle forms. The film follows a seemingly happy homemaker whose world shatters when her ambitious husband slaps her publicly at a party. Her decision to seek a divorce forces her family and the audience to question the fundamental nature of respect and equality within a marriage. It confronted normalized violence and sparked debate nationwide.
6. Haq
A courtroom drama inspired by the landmark 1985 judgment of the Supreme Court. The film talks about a woman who seeks justice for herself and her 3 children, when her husband divorces her and stops paying maintenance, leading to a legal battle that explores women’s rights within personal faith, social customs, and civil law.
With HAQ, Junglee Pictures adds yet another title to its catalogue of high-impact cinema. The studio’s dedication to socially relevant narratives like Raazi, Badhai Ho, and Badhai Do finds renewed validation as the film’s commercial and cultural traction continue to grow.
As its theatrical run continues to build momentum, HAQ stands tall as a defining victory for socially fearless storytelling and ignites the bigger conversations on Uniform Civil Code and the need for establishing one law for all religions so that justice is served equally to all. It doesn’t just join the country’s growing wave of robust, justice-driven cinema, it raises the stakes, and sets a new benchmark for what women-led narratives can achieve at the Indian box office.