It is no secret that films find it easy to imagine women as mothers — if not a mother, there is possible motherhood lurking as a catastrophic event (Shakun Batra’s ‘Gehraiyaan’ falls into the same trap). And yet, for all this overrepresentation across different contexts and industries, motherhood has hardly been explored beyond clichés. Like all clichés, the trouble is not its subject, but how it is looked at. Recent films like Maggie Gyllenhaal’s directorial debut ‘The Lost Daughter’ and Céline Sciamma ‘Petite Maman’ — both made by filmmakers experimenting with the female gaze — make this gap strikingly clear. Cinema, it seems, is beginning to get interested in exploring motherhood beyond sacrifice and trauma.