We watch the performers paint themselves, collect alms, argue with family members, and sit in silence after a long day’s work. By focusing so closely on its three subjects, the film hints at the broader structures, like temple hierarchies, caste exclusions, municipal crackdowns, that shape their lives. As a viewer, one longs for a wider lens: to know how many such performers exist, whether what they earn is enough to support their families, and how authorities regulate or ignore them. A few more minutes of context, and perhaps a little less footage of religious rituals could have transformed individual narrative into systemic critique. On second thought, the absence may be deliberate: Devnani resists turning her protagonists into mere data points. She keeps the emphasis on lived experience of informal labour and its economic grind.