Directed by Nandita Das , the story highlights how, in a world of five-star ratings, the most valuable thing remains the human dignity that an algorithm cannot measure.
His life is now a high-stakes game governed by an "invisible boss"—an algorithm that demands perfect ratings and impossible delivery quotas. Manas navigates a city of contradictions: he climbs stairs when delivery boys are banned from elevators, handles impatient, entitled customers, and chases elusive "selfie incentives" just to keep his head above water. A Household in Transition
At home, the traditional dynamics of his family are shifting. His wife, ( Shahana Goswami ), watches the mounting pressure on Manas and decides to step out of her role as a homemaker. Driven by a mix of fear and newfound excitement for independence, she takes on work as a cleaner and a masseuse.
Manas, conditioned by old-fashioned ideas of being the sole breadwinner, initially bristles at Pratima working. However, as the app’s demands become more dehumanizing—culminating in him being blocked after a fake customer complaint—he is forced to confront his own biases and the harsh reality of their social class. The Human Core
In the humid air of Bhubaneswar, ( Kapil Sharma ) is a man defined by a blue rectangular backpack and the relentless ping of a smartphone. Once a respected floor manager at a factory, the pandemic stripped him of his job, forcing him into the volatile "gig economy" as a rider for Zwigato , a food delivery app.