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Sushmita is waiting for the right script to make her comeback

Former Miss Universe and one of the most graceful actresses of Indian cinema, Sushmita Sen has been missing from the spotlight for more than 7 years now. She was last seen in No Problem, which released way back in 2010.

Though the actress has not been part of many successful films, her fans across the nation still want to see her in more movies. Even Sen is keen to make a comeback, but she does not want to rush into it. A great script is all she has been waiting for, for the past one and a half year.


"I have been looking at scripts again for the past one and a half year," she said upon being asked about her plans of returning to films.

"I think I am ready to commit six months of my life to a film. But, just because I am ready, doesn't mean the perfect script is ready for me," she added.

We wish some filmmaker hears it and offers her the kind of role she is looking for.

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Highlights:

  • February 2017: Actress abducted and sexually assaulted; case reported the next day.
  • Legal journey: Trial ran nearly nine years, with witnesses turning hostile and evidence disputes.
  • Verdict: Six accused convicted; actor Dileep acquitted of conspiracy in December 2025.
  • Industry impact: Led to WCC, Hema Committee report, and exposure of systemic harassment.
  • Aftermath: Protests, public backlash, and survivor’s statement questioning justice and equality.

You arrive in Kochi, and it feels like the sea air makes everything slightly sharper; faces in the city look purposeful, a film poster peels at the corner of a wall. In a city that has cradled a thriving film industry for decades, a single crime on the night of 17 February 2017 ruptured the ordinary: an abduction, a recorded sexual assault and a survivor who reported it the next day. What happened next is every woman’s unspoken nightmare, weaponised into brutal reality. It was a public unpeeling of an industry’s power structures, a slow-motion fight over evidence and testimony, and a national debate about how institutions protect (or fail) women.

For over eight years, her fight for justice became a mirror held up to an entire industry and a society. It was a journey from the dark confines of that car to the glaring lights of a courtroom, from being a silenced victim to becoming a defiant survivor whose voice sparked a revolution. This is not just the story of a crime. It is the story of what happens when one woman says, "Enough," and the tremors that follow.

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