India-based Netflix film 'Period. End of Sentence' wins Oscars for best documentary short subject
The film produced under the banner of Guneet Monga's production house, Sikhya Entertainment, also is known for making movies like Masaan, Lunchbox

- Feb 25, 2019,
- Updated Feb 25, 2019 1:53 PM IST
'Period. End of Sentence,' a Netflix short documentary, has won has won the Oscars in the Documentary Short Subject category at the 91st Academy Awards. The film is produced under the banner of Guneet Monga's production house, Sikhya Entertainment, which is known for making critically acclaimed movies like Masaan, Lunchbox, and Haraamkhor. Director Rayka Zehtabchi's short film had faced competition other movies like End Game, Black Sheep, Lifeboat and A Night at the Garden. While accepting the award, Rayka Zehtabchi, with fellow producer Melissa Berton, said, "I can't believe a film about menstruation just won an Oscar!"
The documentary highlights a project started by students at the Oakwood School in Los Angeles, California, and their teacher, Melissa Berton. It narrates the story of women leading a revolution against the taboo surrounding menstruation, in a village on the outskirts of Delhi. These women, with no access to sanitary pads, have been struggling with this problem for generations. However, when a machine that manufactures sanitary pads is installed in the village, they learn to make their own pads. Their effort is partly enabled by high-school girls, who gathered the initial sum of the money required to buy the machine and created a non-profit organisation called The Pad Project.
'Period. End of Sentence,' a Netflix short documentary, has won has won the Oscars in the Documentary Short Subject category at the 91st Academy Awards. The film is produced under the banner of Guneet Monga's production house, Sikhya Entertainment, which is known for making critically acclaimed movies like Masaan, Lunchbox, and Haraamkhor. Director Rayka Zehtabchi's short film had faced competition other movies like End Game, Black Sheep, Lifeboat and A Night at the Garden. While accepting the award, Rayka Zehtabchi, with fellow producer Melissa Berton, said, "I can't believe a film about menstruation just won an Oscar!"
The documentary highlights a project started by students at the Oakwood School in Los Angeles, California, and their teacher, Melissa Berton. It narrates the story of women leading a revolution against the taboo surrounding menstruation, in a village on the outskirts of Delhi. These women, with no access to sanitary pads, have been struggling with this problem for generations. However, when a machine that manufactures sanitary pads is installed in the village, they learn to make their own pads. Their effort is partly enabled by high-school girls, who gathered the initial sum of the money required to buy the machine and created a non-profit organisation called The Pad Project.