The final shot shows Jabya covered in mud and blood, screaming in anguish, while the upper-caste children fly their toy plane in the sky, completely oblivious to his pain. There is no happy ending. The film powerfully illustrates how caste crushes a child's innocence and dreams.
Fandry: A Powerful Mirror of Society and the Caste Struggle Directed by Nagraj Manjule, the 2013 Marathi film fandry movie in hindi
The tension reaches a breaking point during the village festival. A group of wild pigs enters the town square, interrupting the celebrations. The upper-caste villagers, unwilling to touch the animals themselves, call upon Jabya’s family. In front of the entire school—and Shalu—Jabya is forced to chase and capture the filthy animals. The humiliation is visceral; he is no longer a student or a boy with a crush, but a tool for the village's convenience. The final shot shows Jabya covered in mud
Jabya goes to school, but education does not liberate him. His teacher uses casteist slurs. His classmates segregate lunch boxes. Fandry argues that without structural change, schooling is merely a tool for reproducing hierarchy. Fandry: A Powerful Mirror of Society and the