It, however, raises a big question on the kind of movies Bollywood has been making in the past two decades. It’s a period during which it claims to have come of age in terms of the content, having experimented with all kinds of scripts, unlike the time when it depended heavily on the stars for its survival. In recent years, a number of low-budget movies starring little known actors have clicked in a big way, underlining this turnaround but the moot point is: how many of them could be considered on par with the world-class cinema? As The Guardian list indicates in no uncertain terms, Bollywood needs to do a lot more to make an impact on the global level. Let’s pick a few random Bollywood films which were hailed as great works of art by the movie aficionados in this century. Lagaan, Dil Chahta Hai, Monsoon Wedding (all in 2001), Munnabhai MBBS (2003), Hazaaron Khwaishein Aisi (2005), My Brother … Nikhil (2005), Khosla ka Ghosla, Omkara, Rang De Basanti (2006), Black Friday (2007), Dev D, 3 Idiots (2009), Udaan (2010), The Lunchbox, Shahid (2013), Aligarh (2015), Newton (2017), Bhadhaai Ho and AndhaDhun (2018). All these movies left an impact. I have no reasons to believe The Guardian’s learned team of dispassionate critics did not watch all of them. Evidently, none of these movies could capture their imagination when they set out to pick the top 100 from the thousands of movies made in the past 19 years across the globe.