If you haven't seen a movie of Fearless Nadia, or for that matter heard of her, then I strongly recommend you find a copy of this fantastic documentary! It's brilliant!
Director Riyad Vinci Wadia, who is co-incidentally Fearless Nadia's grandnephew, inherited the films of this amazing artiste (as all her films were produced by JBH Wadia, the grand old man of Indian Cinema) and has made this documentary as a familial tribute. However like some other such attempts, this young director (he was 23 when he set about to make this film) thankfully doesn't fall into the gooey trap of sycophancy, and chooses intelligence and sardonic wit to tell a quirky tale.
Fearless Nadia (born Mary Evans) was the only blonde blue eyed star to make it in Indian Cinema (often called Bollywood) and was its reigning diva for an amazing 25 years. She was noted for her comedy, sassyness, overt feminism, but above all it was her unbelievable "stunts" that drew the audiences in. Her stunts included such death defying acts as jumping into rocky waterfalls, swinging from high slung chandeliers, jumping from running carriges onto horseback, or fighting men atop hurtling steam trains. A buxom woman of androgyne beauty she was (she died in 1997) John Wayne, Bette Midler, Mae West, Zorro, and Buster Keaton all rolled in one! Her films were inspired by the Perils Of Pauline serials and other such early silents, and while she worked in the Talkies period her films retain some of the charm and simplicity of these early pioneering ventures.
Director Wadia blends interviews with the star and her collegues and others with astounding footage that he painstakingly restored over a period of three years. The documentary has screened excessively at film festivals the world over and been released on television in several countries. I believe it is available on video too in North America.
This is one star turn that will reaffirm your love and faith in movies and show you how Xena: The Warrior Princess and Jackie Chan are infantile compared to the magic of Fearless Nadia!