Can’t Take This Shit Anymore shows six married women who return to their parents’ homes for lack of
toilets in their new homes. Faced with the indignity and discomfort of having to
defecate in the open, these women chose to weather the social pressure and return to their parents’ homes, something unthinkable for a married woman in rural India. Set in Uttar Pradesh's
Kushinagar district, the documentary is a reminder of the desperate situation of women who are supposed to observe
purdah on the one hand and on the other are forced to relieve themselves out in the open. Through interviews with the protagonists and a social activist, Asma, also the narrator, the film tells the tale of the indignity and dangers women face while defecating in the open. The camera takes the viewer to the fields and roadsides where women converge in groups to relieve themselves under the cover of dark. A folk song highlighting this particular difficulty interlaces the film's narrative. Owing to Asma's campaign and the media coverage of the issue, government authorities build toilets in the six homes. Only then, the women returned to their marital homes. While documenting the stories of these women, the film questions the priorities of the families who spend beyond their means on the wedding but do not have enough money to build a toilet in their backyard. It raises the question whether a toilet in the house serves the purposes of a woman only. Prime Minister
Shri Narendra Modi's reference to the issue in his
Independence Day speech is a reflection of how much still needs to be done in the area of sanitation. ==Awards and nominations==