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1-4 of 4
- Dhaanu, a poor villager, heavily in financial debt, stealthily returns from the city to the village one night. He is hiding from a moneylender who he owes a handsome sum of money. Pushed against the wall, he decides to sell his donkey, Bhasmasur, in the city. Dhaanu's son Tipu, who yearns to go the annual fair in the city, shares a very strong bond with the donkey, Bhasmasur. Tipu in his own childish ways tries to stop Bhasmasur from being sold, but remains unsuccessful. Dhaanu decides to take Tipu to the city too. The trio set off on a journey from the in lands of Rajasthan towards the city, by foot. Along the journey, numerous events take place, bringing the father and son closer. But, will Dhaanu be able to make this bond last?
- The story is about an old man, Marasban living in a swanky retirement home. Tired of the monotony, he decides to escape from the facility for a night. He encounters Lisa, another resident with whom he forms an unlikely bond, helping each other flee.
- This short film is about Riya, a 15 year old basketball player put up in a boarding school, who experiences an unpleasant incident when her cousin tries to feel her up when she goes home for her birthday. How she comes back to the boarding school and tries to deal with this incident forms the body of the story in an excruciating detail.
- The documentary film is about a person named "Njeralathu Harigovindan", who is a traditional folk musician, plays a percussion instrument called "Idakka", in a small village called Angadipuram in Kerala, where he tries to save an art form from extinction, despite facing stern opposition from the village people and the politicians, and protests in his own way against the caste discrimination which is prevalent in Kerala temples. He is the son of Late Mr. Njeralathu Ramapodhuval who is a national award winning folk musician. Harigovindan, after his father passed away in 1996, started performing at various places around the world. 12 years after his father's demise, he built a temple school called "Kalashram" which means "The temple for arts", where he installed his father's musical instrument as the idol in that temple, and it is open for all to visit. He also preserves and exhibits all the traditional folk instruments of Kerala in a museum called "Kerala musical instruments showroom", where he also has an archival section. According to him, "for an artist, the art is god".