Parasakthi thus inverts the Gandhian and pro-Independence/Congress party agenda of Tamil films of the pre-Independence years, as exemplified by director K. Subrahmanyam’s Seva Sadhanam (1938) and Thyaga Bhoomi (1939). Parasakthi is justly suspicious of the euphoria, and in its subnational imperatives, interrogates the North Indian/Congress party hegemony, synonymous with the vision of Prime Minister Nehru and his mentor Gandhi, and the latter’s faith in religion. In the footsteps of their iconic mentor Periyar, preeminent Dravidian ideologues like Annadurai and Karunanidhi, questioned the irrationality surrounding religion and caste, while also challenging the monolithic idea of the nation that imposes its will from above. However, in their investment in electoral politics, they departed from their mentor Periyar by trying to be more inclusive via unifying slogans like “Ondre kulam-oruvane devan (One community-one god)”, and more importantly, away from Periyar’s total investment in the empowering of women. As self-confessed cinephiles, theatre aficionados and playwrights, they accepted the stereotypical and entrenched trope of the abalaippen—the helpless and despondent woman who has to be rescued by a man.