A classroom ban delivered in a Düsseldorf lecture hall gives Randa Chahoud’s adaptation its cleanest provocation. “All white people get out,” Professor Saraswati tells her students, and the instruction lands with the blunt force of theatre. The room changes instantly. White students protest, students of color remain, and the body language of the group begins to tilt toward ritual, argument, and choreography.
Adapted from Mithu Sanyal’s 2021 novel by Friederike Jehn, Identitti takes place in 2019 at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, where postcolonial theory is not an abstract subject. It is social currency, emotional armor, institutional power, and sometimes performance. Saraswati, played by Stephanie Eidt, has built her authority on that charged terrain. In white saris, with controlled gestures and a gaze that seems trained to defeat dissent before it forms, she moves through the university like a priestess of certainty.
For Nivedita, played by Amanda Babaei Vieira, Saraswati is not simply a professor. She is a model of coherence. Nivedita, the daughter of a Polish mother and an Indian father, runs the podcast “Identitti” and carries the fatigue of being asked to explain herself in every room. Saraswati appears to offer a language for that fatigue. Then the language curdles.
The Idol and the Fraud
The film’s strongest narrative turn is almost suspiciously tidy, yet it works because the emotional fallout is messy. Saraswati asks Nivedita to water her plants while she is away. Inside the apartment, Nivedita finds the pieces of an invented life: a photograph of a blonde young woman, colored contact lenses, hair dye, and a newspaper clipping tied to Sarah Vera Thielmann, a German exchange student in India. The name has the dead weight of bureaucracy. It punctures the myth.
Eidt plays Saraswati’s exposure with an unnerving calm. She does not collapse under accusation. She rearranges it. When challenged, she turns the theory that made her famous back toward her accusers, suggesting that whiteness may be discarded, that identity may be constructed, that oppression can become a chosen form of solidarity. The argument is seductive because it is morally grotesque and intellectually agile at once. The film understands that bad faith can be eloquent.
Nivedita’s response gives Identitti its emotional center. Vieira does not play betrayal as instant clarity. Her face registers shock first, then injury, then the terrible pause of someone who knows that exposing a lie may also damage the fragile community that helped her name her own pain. Oluchi and Priti move faster, pushing toward public denunciation and collective action. Nivedita lingers in the harder space between outrage and dependence.
Kali, Choreography, and Cultural Translation
Chahoud’s adaptation refuses the plain shape of a campus scandal drama. Lecture halls become performance spaces. Student bodies twitch and pulse in choreographed unison. Social media commentary pushes into the frame. Bollywood-inflected dance numbers interrupt argument. The result is intentionally unstable, a film trying to make discourse move.
Constanza Macras’ choreography is most persuasive when it treats theory as something stored in the body. The opening classroom sequence gains force because the students’ distorted movements suggest what polite academic speech often hides: anxiety, exclusion, embarrassment, rage. The body speaks before the seminar can organize it.
The film’s use of Kali, played by Sabrina Setlur, is bolder and less consistent. Setlur appears as Nivedita’s imagined alter ego, a pop-diva goddess in vivid color, with extravagant nails and a command of space that Saraswati’s colder authority cannot match. The image draws from Indian mythology but refuses devotional solemnity. This Kali is performance, provocation, pep talk, and inner rebellion.
That choice has spark. It also risks turning a layered cultural figure into a motivational spectacle. Indian cinema has long treated gods, avatars, and dream figures as fluid presences inside song, desire, crisis, and moral reckoning. Here, the reference feels strongest when Kali breaks Nivedita’s submission to Saraswati’s vocabulary. It feels thinner when the film leans on the goddess as visual shorthand for empowerment. The difference matters.
The Bollywood touches face a similar problem. Musical interruption can reveal what realism represses, and Chahoud clearly understands that. Yet the dentist brother subplot and its solo dance detour do not deepen the scandal or Nivedita’s conflict. They decorate a film already crowded with ideas.
A Mixed-Race Wonder Woman Without Easy Answers
Vieira keeps Identitti from floating away into its own cleverness. Her Nivedita is thoughtful without being passive, wounded without being neatly noble. The apartment discovery, her hesitation over the podcast, and her uneasy attempts to understand Saraswati after the crowd has chosen its verdict all suggest a young woman trying to build a self from languages that keep failing her.
Julian Hohndorf’s cinematography helps ground that process. Düsseldorf-Oberbilk is not treated as neutral background; the streets and university interiors carry the friction of a post-migrant Germany still arguing over who gets to belong and who gets to define the terms. The campus scenes have speed and charge, but the film’s most piercing shift arrives with the Hanau sequence, which cuts through the theoretical fencing. Racism is not a seminar exercise there. It is grief, memory, and murder.
Identitti works best when it lets that knowledge press against Nivedita’s personal crisis. Saraswati’s fraud matters because identity is not costume alone, and because pain cannot be borrowed like fabric from another wardrobe. Chahoud’s film sometimes confuses energy with insight, yet its strongest scenes understand the deeper wound beneath the scandal: the hunger for a name that fits, and the danger of trusting anyone who claims to own the dictionary.
The zesty German comedy-drama film Identitti made its world premiere at the Munich International Film Festival in June 2026 and is scheduled for a wider theatrical rollout by Alamode Film on November 12, 2026. Audiences will be able to catch the provocative independent feature in select cinemas across Germany during its autumn release. The story centers on Nivedita, a university student and podcaster who feels caught between cultural boundaries, whose world is completely shattered when she discovers that her idolized postcolonial studies professor, Saraswati, has entirely fabricated her Indian identity.
Full Credits
Title: Identitti
Distributor: Alamode Film, Razor Film Produktion
Release date: June 2026 (Munich Film Festival Premiere), November 12, 2026 (Germany Theatrical Release)
Running time: 103 minutes
Director: Randa Chahoud
Writers: Friederike Jehn, Mithu Sanyal
Producers and Executive Producers: Roman Paul, Gerhard Meixner
Cast: Amanda Babaei Vieira, Stephanie Eidt, Zoe Magdalena, Sabrina Setlur, Saba Lou Khan, Alexandra Finder, Daniela Holtz
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Julian Hohndorf
Editors: Solveig Cornelisen
Composer: Burak Özdemir
The Review
Identitti
Identitti is sharpest when its campus scandal becomes a question of performance, pain, and belonging, with Amanda Babaei Vieira grounding the theory in lived uncertainty. Randa Chahoud’s dances, goddess visions, and pop-cultural flourishes give the adaptation a restless cinematic pulse, though some detours pull focus from Nivedita’s crisis. Its Indian references and Kali imagery work best when they complicate identity rather than decorate it.
PROS
- Amanda Babaei Vieira’s nuanced lead performance
- Stephanie Eidt’s slippery, commanding Saraswati
- Bold choreography and fantasy devices
- Strong cultural and political provocations
- Hanau sequence gives the debate real weight
CONS
- Some comic flourishes interrupt the drama
- Dentist brother subplot feels underdeveloped
- Dialogue can become clunky
- The fantasy thread sometimes overstates Nivedita’s inner life





















































