Baai Tujhyapayi, a new Marathi show on Zee5, is set in the early 1990s in the remote village of Vesaich Vadgaon, Maharashtra. It follows Ahilya, a girl with dreams of becoming a doctor who must navigate 500-year-old oppressive customs that still govern village life. The core conflict arrives when the community’s tradition dictates that girls are married off at puberty, leaving Ahilya to decide whether to hide her own coming of age or fight to rewrite her future.

Director Nipun Avinash Dharmadhikari builds a gritty, atmospheric world. The visuals pull you into a rough, intimate space where every close-up feels charged with unease. The series treats its subject like puberty and the pressure to marry young; as something many would rather not talk about, but which cannot be brushed aside. The mood and texture recall acclaimed, atmospherically minded works, using restraint over spectacle to heighten impact. Stylistically, the show nods to the mood and texture of films like Tumbbad, employing a restrained production approach that lets the narrative and characters breathe. It’s this discipline that allows the audience to focus on the human stakes rather than on star power.

The cast; Sajiri Joshi, Kshitee Jog, Siddhesh Dhuri, and Shivraj Waichal—keeps the spotlight on vulnerability and truth, avoiding the lure of celebrity vanity and delivering a more grounded viewing experience. At its heart, the story is simple yet powerful: a girl with dreams of serving her village as a doctor must weigh that dream against the risk that puberty will seal her fate in an arranged marriage.

The narrative promises a close look at how families in such communities cling to tradition, and how one determined young woman might challenge that order. The show has drawn attention for its grounded, human approach to crucial themes, gender, agency, and the cost of entrenched customs, presented through intimate performances and a stark, real-world setting.