
The Verisimilitude Problem in ‘Jigra’
The Hindu
The Alia Bhatt-starrer ‘Jigra’ tries to be grounded, but then leaps into implausibility, causing a verisimilitude problem: you stop believing in the world on screen
Ever watched a film and thought, “Wait — why would anyone do that?” That’s not a logic flaw — it’s a verisimilitude problem. You stop believing in the world on screen, and once that trust is broken, the film falters.
Jigra, our case study for this fortnight, opens with a quiet family moment: a father apologises to his young daughter, then calmly steps off a balcony in front of her and her brother. It’s a moment of stark poetry, but it also yanks the audience straight out of the story. The question isn’t “Is this realistic?” but “Does this feel true to the film’s world?”
What is verisimilitude? Verisimilitude means “truth-like,” and it’s all about internal consistency, not documentary realism. Cultural verisimilitude aligns with genre conventions, cultural norms and audience expectations, while formal verisimilitude honours the rules the film itself establishes. Verisimilitude helps us identify with characters without scepticism. For the audience to trust a protagonist, they must know who she truly is — very early on. Break these rules, and viewers simply stop caring.
Perfect examples include Satya, which feels like Mumbai itself; Masaan, which captures raw emotion in a single stolen glance; Animal, which commits fully to its toxic-alpha fantasy and never wavers; The Usual Suspects, which plants every clue so Keyser Söze’s twist lands flawlessly; and even Superman, whose one consistent weakness — Kryptonite — keeps us grounded in a world of the impossible.
The world-building in Jigra’s first minutes leaves us with a host of questions. Why would a father kill himself in front of his children and scar them for life? How is Satya coping with this trauma? Has she had help? Shouldn’t the story explore her shattered psyche or the aftermath? Or if that’s not the story, why begin with it?
The seamless transition between the world-building and its dormant relationship with the core conflict defines verisimilitude: the fabric of carefully constructed reality that holds the film together.
Yet none of these questions are answered. We move instead into a fictional nation with draconian drug laws and a sister-on-a-mission plot, leaving us stranded outside the story.

Parvathi Nayar’s new exhibition, The Primordial, in Mumbai, traces oceans, pepper and climate change
Opened on March 12, the exhibition marks the artist’s first solo show in Mumbai in nearly two decades. Known for her intricate graphite drawings and multidisciplinary practice spanning installation, photography, video, and climate change, her artistic journey has long engaged with the themes of ecology, climate change and the natural world. In this ongoing exhibition, these strands converge through a series of works centred on water, salt, and pepper — materials that carry natural and historic weight across centuries.












