The cliches were first challenged by Mahesh Bhatt when he created prominent characters with substantial screen time in the 1990s. While in Sadak (1991), the eunuch (Sadashiv Amrapurkar) played the merciless pimp who announces to the heroine that he cannot do anything to her as he is neither a man nor a woman, Paresh Rawal played Tikku, the kind-hearted transgender who brings up the orphan protagonist against all odds in Tamanna (1997). Although there was a new possibility that the transgender person or the eunuch could be an important character in a popular film, they were still shown as outliers living on the fringes. For a while, courtesy of a few powerful performances, the negative characterisation of a transgender person became attractive to filmmakers. Sometimes, perceived transwoman make-up was used, like in Sangharsh (1999), to increase the danger quotient of the villain. Meanwhile, despite a few attempts to tell a wholesome story of the transgender experience—Darmiyaan (1997), Shabnam Mausi (2005)—the formulaic world of Bollywood continued its march with its inaccurate and cliched portrayals. Many Hindi films in the 1990s and 2000s, including super hits such as Raja Hindustani, featured ambiguous effeminate characters played by men and at times, a boisterous and manly character played by a woman, with exaggerated physical gestures and gaudy make-up, as the protagonist’s friend. This idea of using sexual minorities for the comedy track was pushed beyond acceptable boundaries in sex comedies like Masti (2004) where Ritesh Deshmukh’s character feels the need to clean his mouth after realising that Rakhee Sawant’s character, with whom he has just had a romantic rendezvous, is a transwoman.