In the third phase of the post-Emergency era, there was an all-pervasive sense of disillusionment and despair. An overwhelming sense of despair marks these courtroom dramas. For instance, films like Insaf ka Tarazu (B.R. Chopra/1980) and Damini (Rajkumar Santoshi/1993) etc, voiced their anguish about the state of women within the family, society, economy and the nation; films like Mohan Joshi Hazir Ho!(Saeed Mirza/1984) dealt with the frustrating ways in which the Indian legal system got around justice without ever delivering it to the common man. Aakrosh (Govind Nihalani/1980) was a devastating critique on how the subaltern classes have been kept out of the orders of justice of all kinds, social, political and economic. The new millennium and the expectations and promises fuelled by globalisation saw the emergence of the Market as the sole new dispenser of equality and justice, where convoluted ethical argumentation and the tortuous legalities of the court seem to begin to lose their relevance and sanctity. Courts begin to lose their aura and, most importantly, their status as dispensers of justice, and as a site where competing claims of civil society could be expressed and settled, as Court (Chaitanya Tamhane/2015) powerfully and heartbreakingly shows. In Aakrosh, the subaltern peasant played by Om Puri is silenced and silent; he is muted by the brute power of caste and the economic and political order, he does not entertain any hope of getting justice from it. On the other, in Court the subaltern voice of Narayan Kamble, the Dalit activist, is loud, clear and rebellious, but his voice is never heard or listened to within a legal matrix that caters only to the privileged.