Much before words like deep-dive and immersive became popular, the film takes you inside the red-light district of Mumbai, to Falkland Road, almost documentary-style, makes you smell the stench from the open drains, feel the sweat and the flies on people’s shoulders as well as the hopes and dreams of Bombay’s slum dwellers (which the Oscar darling Slumdog Millionaire with all its cinematic flair misses). You live with its characters, with Chaipao, the street urchin who wants to earn money, rescue the girl he covets from the brothel and cross over to a better life. You hope with him but you know deep down he will never escape these streets. You feel the helplessness of Sola Saal, the girl in the brothel who is prized because she is a virgin, who will take any route to dodge her fate but in the end gets sucked into the racket. You know it will all end badly for Chillum, the foul-mouthed, soft-hearted drug addict and peddler (a brilliant Raghuvir Yadav) but still wish him at least a decent farewell. The scheming pimp and smalltime ganglord Baba (Nana Patekar, in one of his first roles where he announced he is in for the long haul) too talks of starting life all over again. His wife Rekha (Anita Kanwar, it’s a shame we didn’t see too much of her in later years), the prostitute who dreams of a better life for her little girl.