Bindiya and Nimmo are two poor and illiterate girls in a village. A pimp Jagan Babu brings them from their village to his state with the promise of marriage. For his monetary benefits, he keeps them as servants in his house until he gets a handsome amount by selling them.
Bindiya, a blooming flower, is a minor. For her, marriage means new clothes and jewelry to wear and good food to eat. She is married to a wrestler who is a drunkard lecherous and older than her own father. She is made his wife and pushed into the mouth of death right from her wedding night.
After marriage, Nimmo considers the injustices done to her as ill-fate. Even though her near and dear ones treat her like an animal, she tolerates everything silently. To fill her sinful belly, she begs alms, but even then, the people of the village see the hapless girl with their lustful eyes and want to take advantage of her loneliness and helplessness.
What happens to them in the end?
Bindiya and Nimmo are two poor and illiterate girls in a village. A pimp Jagan Babu brings them from their village to his state with the promise of marriage. For his monetary benefits, he keeps them as servants in his house until he gets a handsome amount by selling them.
Bindiya, a blooming flower, is a minor. For her, marriage means new clothes and jewelry to wear and good food to eat. She is married to a wrestler who is a drunkard lecherous and older than her own father. She is made his wife and pushed into the mouth of death right from her wedding night.
After marriage, Nimmo considers the injustices done to her as ill-fate. Even though her near and dear ones treat her like an animal, she tolerates everything silently. To fill her sinful belly, she begs alms, but even then, the people of the village see the hapless girl with their lustful eyes and want to take advantage of her loneliness and helplessness.
What happens to them in the end?