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1-21 of 21
- Mitti Ke Rang Shows short stories about different varied culture of Indian people.
- Sapna Na Vavetar was a Gujarati daily soap being aired on DD Gujarati during 90s (1996-97). Later on, due to its sheer success and popularity, its Hindi version was created and was aired on SET with the serial name Ek Mahal Ho Sapno Ka. This was also very famous and gained lot of popularity and set a trend for TV serial industries for family serial drama.
- The violence and upheaval of Calcutta in the 1970s is focalized through a young man coming to the city to study.
- 'Work of Fire' is an attempt to engage with the fleeting, the transient and the ephemeral through fireworks.
- The film "Blood on my Hands" deals with the issues of puberty and sexuality of women, a subject which is treaded upon very carefully in the Indian society. The film makers attempt to put together a montage of viewpoints, those of men and women, about their ideas of the hush hush term 'period' and the immense weight the word carries in a woman's context. In a culture which treats menstruating women in the same manner that it treats a patient with a highly contagious disease, shies away from open discussions about sexual organs and runs away from sex education, needs to be sensitized to the problems faced by the youth. In the wake of recent events in India, the movie makes a pertinent point and gives in insight into why something as natural and obvious as a woman's coming of age, is not an acceptable fact in the society.
- A collection of short films dealings with morality of people.
- Awareness program on Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana (2014) scheme.
- In one of the poorest parts of the world, 230,000 people learned to read and write. Over 100,000 women learned to cycle. Wages jumped up 1000% It happened in the space of just one year and cost about a dollar per person.
- Made in the aftermath of sectarian violence between Hindus and Muslims in the Indian state of Gujarat, this is the story of two traditional healers of Gujarat who are Muslim but serve predominantly Hindus. They work in places where there are no vets or doctors. By relying on ecologically friendly methods to heal animals, humans and even plants. They are living embodiment of religious tolerance, respect for biodiversity and altruism.