Best Indian Documentaries on YouTube
Some of the most powerful Indian stories are free to watch on YouTube. Here are the documentaries you need to see.
Some of the most powerful Indian stories are free to watch on YouTube. Here are the documentaries you need to see.
The irony of Indian cinema is that while our fictional films keep getting bigger, louder, and more spectacular, some of the most powerful Indian stories are being told quietly — in documentaries you can watch for free on YouTube. No theatre tickets needed, no subscription required. Just a screen, an internet connection, and a willingness to see India as it really is.
Anand Patwardhan's magnum opus, running nearly four hours, documents the Dalit movement through the lens of music and resistance. Patwardhan spent fourteen years making this film, and the depth shows. If you watch one Indian documentary this year, make it this one.
Deepti Kakkar and Fahad Mustafa's documentary about electricity theft in Kanpur is simultaneously hilarious and devastating. Loha Singh, a freelance electrician who illegally taps power lines, is one of the most charismatic documentary subjects we've ever encountered. Entertaining and enlightening.
Dylan Mohan Gray's documentary about how Western pharmaceutical companies blocked access to affordable AIDS drugs in Africa, and how Indian generic drug manufacturers fought back. A David vs Goliath story with millions of lives at stake, told with remarkable clarity.
Khushboo Ranka and Vinay Shukla followed Arvind Kejriwal during AAP's formation. Whatever your politics, this documentary is fascinating as a study of how political movements form and face their first moral compromises. The access the filmmakers got is remarkable.
Rahul Jain's documentary about workers in a Gujarat textile factory. The camera moves through the factory like a ghost, observing men performing backbreaking labour. There's minimal narration — the images speak with devastating eloquence. Beautiful and gut-wrenching.
Cameras given to children living in Kolkata's red-light district. The resulting photographs — and the Oscar-winning documentary about making them — reveal beauty in places most people would see only despair. A film about the power of art to transform perspective.
Leslee Udwin's documentary about the 2012 Delhi gang rape case. The interview with one of the convicted rapists is chilling in its casualness. The Indian government banned it, which only made people more determined to watch it. Triggering but vital.
Nisha Pahuja juxtaposes Miss India contestants and women in a Hindu nationalist training camp. Both groups are trying to find power in a system that constrains them, but their methods couldn't be more different. Pahuja doesn't judge; she observes.
Abhay Kumar's documentary about illegal drug trials conducted on India's poorest citizens. Pharmaceutical companies testing untested drugs on vulnerable people who don't fully understand what they're consenting to. Investigative filmmaking at its bravest.
Oscar-nominated documentary about Khabar Lahariya, India's only newspaper run by Dalit women, as they transition from print to digital. It's a story about journalism, caste, gender, and the courage to speak truth in a country that doesn't always want to hear it. Inspiring without being saccharine, honest about the challenges while celebrating the triumphs.
The beauty of these documentaries being on YouTube is accessibility. Many were made specifically to be seen by as many people as possible. The filmmakers chose free distribution because their stories matter more than ticket sales. Take an evening. Pick one. Let it change how you see something.