Earlier films such as Page 3 (2005), CityLights (2014) and Dhobi Ghat (2010) staged Mumbai through binaries of success and failure, often through an outsider who either conquered or was crushed by the city. Contemporary cinema, however, reveals a more diffuse transformation. In Payal Kapadia’s All We Imagine as Light (2024), Mumbai appears as a city capable of accommodating labour, but unable to accommodate emotional continuity. The city reorganises intimacy, emotional time and self-worth, producing a psychological climate that shapes how young people imagine their futures and endure their present. This impulse also finds expression in Bejoy Nambiar’s Tu Yaa Main (2026), where a single city produces sharply unequal emotional realities. Adarsh Gourav’s Aala Flowpara, a rapper from Nalasopara, draws his voice from material instability shaped by water scarcity, spatial compression and systemic neglect. His art emerges from survival. In contrast, Shanaya Kapoor’s Miss Vanity moves through inherited wealth, yet remains emotionally unmoored. Social media becomes their site of articulation, allowing both to construct identities the physical city cannot accommodate. Mumbai operates here as an emotional infrastructure, giving form to both absence and self-invention.