Short Films
“What Did You Think”: A Saga on Seeking Constant Validation
A Bandra Film Festival short film on dealing with insecurities, and the ceaseless need of self-validation.

What others think of our life, our performance, of us is the most important question that matters the most to human beings. The whole existence is sometimes dedicated to establishing a life that seems fit or normal from the social perspective, an outlook that makes us socially acceptable and loved. The advent of social media made it even worse as it feeds into the need for constant validation to build a confident self. The likes, the hearts, and the shares can give you skyrocketing confidence and ground-thrashing anxiety in a couple of minutes.
The short film “What did you think?” tries to showcase this thought process through a simple story of some theatrical actors, for whom the validation of others on their performance is a daily need and a natural question. The question does not elude even the most experienced actors; they are ready to take the validation of amateurs to feel superior, happy, and confident.
The short film gives just one instance of this behaviour of human beings, and if we press real hard on our minds, we will find that we seek validation from others in the smallest of things. Whether it is clothes, cars, education, job, friends or marriage, it matters what opinions others have of us. We are all ears to what others have to say at all times.
Published by the Bandra Film Festival, the writer tries to give this vital message on insecurities and constant self-validation through subtle sarcasm and comedy. Watching the short film is more like an awakening, an observation, as sometimes we do see the problem but hardly perceive or absorb it. The short film highlights the problem and leaves it to the discretion of the viewer to connect to it in their way and works toward their insecurities.
Short Films
Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap: A Heart-Warming Reminder
The film, Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap, is a heart-warming reminder of our parents’ undying love and support for us.

Growing up, we used to share everything with our parents. Even the most boring day at school will become the most happening when we are narrating it to our mothers or fathers. There was not a single secret that they were not aware of. Our very first trustworthy secret keeper soon becomes the person from whom we hide everything. The person we used to trust the most soon becomes the person we run away from the most. Nobody knows what changes and what doesn’t, but the fact remains that the person whom we used to entrust our deepest secrets with soon becomes someone we hide even small details of our life from. And this complexity is beautifully captured in the short film Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap.
Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap: A Closer Look
Directed by Bhatlla Vrun, the film Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap showcases the everyday life of a working daughter and her loving mother, whom the daughter doesn’t find quite so loving. They used to be best friends growing up, but once the daughter began working and staying out late, their relationship took a backseat.
The film, Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap, brings to light the gap between a mother and daughter that tends to remain in the shadows as it is considered “growing pains”. The film addresses the issue behind such a communication gap and forces the audience to reconsider their own decisions and narratives. It reminds people that no matter how old one may grow up, the bond between a Maa Beti will forever remain untainted. The film, Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap, reiterates the fact that no matter what happens, your parents won’t stop supporting you; your trust may waver, but theirs won’t even flinch.
The acting and execution of the story in the film Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap are brilliantly done to highlight the subtle nuances of the mother-daughter bond. The camera angle also does justice in highlighting the tension and anxiety faced by the daughter. Some improvements can be done to make the story a bit better, especially the part where the mother leaves the daughter to leave for a retreat only to help her in the end, that bit could have been developed better to make the storyline more impactful.
Afterword
The film, Maa Beti Aur Communication Gap, is a heart-warming reminder of our parents’ undying love and support for us. Even though we may grow up and start questioning their love, they will never ever stop believing or supporting us in whatever we do. All the film asks from the audience is to take a leap and have faith in your parents once again.
Short Films
Sajaavat: Loving Yourself

Sometimes in a hurry to please others, we often forget ourselves. And sometimes, in order to be true to ourselves, we forget to experiment and try out different things. There’s always a need to find one’s true self and become the best version of oneself, as was pointed out by Abraham Maslow in his hierarchy of needs. But in order to get there, we often need to try out different things to find our true selves. And even once we do find ourselves, it’s very easy to be stuck in one particular mould forever, whereas we as humans are supposed to explore and expand ourselves with different opportunities. Being the best version of yourself or just being yourself shouldn’t always come with one mould that you never grow from. You should be allowed to grow and glow, and that’s exactly what the short film Sajaavat highlights.
Sajaavat: A Closer Look
Written and directed by Sarang Sathaye, Sajaavat brings to life a tale of every household where the sound of sibling rivalry fills the living room. Siblings share a unique bond of trust and mischief and nothing could capture it better that the film, Sajaavat. Although siblings may fight day in and day out they are always there for all the impotant events and moments in your life. And just like your siblings show up everytime there’s someone else who shows up for you as well, and that is “you”. A little meta way of thinking but it’s true you always show up for yourself. But just like you take your siblings presence for granted so do you take yourself and being yourself for granted, and that’s what the film Sajaavat tries to help you look at.
The film Sajaavat starts off with the regular hum drum of a family whose two daughters are busy bickering. One of them seems to be the favoured one while the other seems to be the angry one. The sibling dynamic is clearly laid out in the film Sajaavat. What is not known is how the siblings cope with their ownself. We get to see how favouritism can bring cracks between a bond but the sooner you find it and fix it the longer the relationship lasts. But the bigger message in the film Sajaavat is the distinction between taking care of yourself and decorating something. The film Sajaavat brings to out notice that taking care of yourself is not equivalent to decorating something or putting up a Sajaavat but rather it’s something you do for yourself. And it shouldn’t be something you should shy away from or be ashamed of.
Afterword
Sajaavat is a film that will heal your soul and make you proud of wherever you are in life and push you to be proud of it just like a sibling would. It’s a film that will reaffirm and reassure whatever you are feeling and let you be your unabashed self.
Short Films
Kaanch: A Chilling Break from the Mundane
Kaanch is a must-watch for a chilling break from your mundane life! Read on to find out more about this short psychological thriller!

Imagine going to do something as mundane as getting a haircut and then spiralling and thinking that the person giving you a haircut is about to cut a vital nerve. Imagine cooking with someone only to imagine them trying to chop you up the next moment. Imagine going to the garden to work with the gardener only to imagine further how they will hit you with the shovel and bury you alive. Sounds chilling right? And mostly because all of these experiences are so normal and mundane that we don’t imagine them ever affecting us in a bad way in real life. It’s the abnormality in the normality of things that sends shivers down our spines. Balaram J, Partha Mahanta, Praful Kumar, and Siddhant Geedh played with these exact ideas to create a chilling short film with Kaanch.
Kaanch: A Closer Look
A student-animated psychological thriller film, Kaanch brings to light the dysfunctionality in your regular functional life as a man with a traumatic past gets constantly hounded with dangerous and traumatic thoughts that affect his present. The brevity of the film is what keeps you on edge as it ends on an abrupt note. Though brief, Kaanch manages to tap into the deep psychological fears that many of us may possess.
Diving into a bit more detail, there are certain cinematic elements that the film uses to create a sense of anticipation and fear while making it all the more relatable. The movie posters with known actors in the real world like Salman Khan and others in the first shot of the film, Kaanch establishes the context as somewhere in India maybe somewhere in the lane next to where we live. The use of certain colours to build up anticipation, anxiety and confusion in the viewers such as different shades of red to focus on something sinister, and the use of cool tones like blue and grey to differentiate the real world from the thought realm to confuse the audience more is one of the brilliant aspects in this film, Kaanch.
The very idea that the makers of the film, Kaanch took something very mundane as cutting hair and made it into a nightmare is a true hallmark of a thriller. Often neglected but rather very easy to imagine once you’ve got a knack for it, the mundane world is the best place to harvest thriller and horror. Even though it’s an animated film it’s bound to chill your spine as if it’s a feature film.
Afterword
If you wish to take a chilling break from your day-to-day mundane life, give this film a chance. Who knows maybe tomorrow your regular mundane world will be turned upside down because of just 5 minutes of watch time?
Short Films
Beans Aloo: A Dialogue Between Every Mother & Mother-to-be
Beans Aloo highlights a casual conversation which turned into a beautiful acceptance and understanding of adoption and motherhood.

Our mothers have always lied to us. “No, I am not hungry, you eat it”. “You can take the last piece; I don’t like it anyway”. Remember the last time you said ‘Ah’ while your mother was eating and she happily fed you that last bite smiling? Mothers always put their children and families before themselves sacrificing their dreams and desires. Mothers are supposed to sacrifice and they are never supposed to be selfish. To begin with, a woman is never given a chance to choose if she wants to be a mother or not. The world we live in today fails to understand that motherhood is not as objective as it seems to be. Motherhood is felt and experienced differently by different people. Motherhood is not merely biological; it is an emotion. Beans Aloo is a short film that discusses the experience of motherhood and the choices of modern women about being a mother, which is a dialogue between every mother and mother-to-be.
Beans Aloo: The Plot
The film opens with the mother cooking her married daughter’s favourite dish. While eating the mother and daughter duo have a casual conversation which takes a diversion when the mother brings in the concept of babies to the table. The daughter on the other hand shows complete disinterest in the topic ends up announcing that she does not want to give birth to a child. The mother is concerned and agitated hearing this and keeps reiterating the difficulties of having a child even after years of planning.
As the film progresses the conversation is no longer about the mother and daughter but about what the others think about the daughter not having a child and how society has already started labelling the couple impotent. But the daughter is least bothered about what the others have got to say but is clearly upset because her mother did not stand up for her when the others ill-mouthed her daughter.
The narrative in the film slowly shifts, as the daughter emphasises the difficulty of raising a child safe and protected in a cruel world like today. But the mother does not give up, she tells the daughter about the beauty of motherhood. But the daughter points out how she sacrificed eating her favourite beans aloo just because her kids hated it. The daughter then tells her mother that she does not have to push a baby out of her to be a mother but she can still experience motherhood.
When the question “Who will take care of you in your old age?” is thrown at the daughter, she reassures her mother that she will adopt a child if it is really necessary. The film ends with the mother accepting the concept of adoption and finally deciding to cook her favourite beans aloo.
The Takeaway
We live in a social setting that still reduces the entire existence of a woman to just a reproductive machine that produces babies for the continuation of their family lineages. “A woman truly becomes a woman only after she becomes a mother” is a common phrase that is shown in various Indian films and media to portray the backward mindset of society. But this short film was different, it showed the progress we are making in accepting and acknowledging the choices that today’s women want to make. It is really heartwarming to encounter our parents and family breaking the stereotypes about women and motherhood. Beans Aloo is a film that will bring a smile to everybody’s face.
Short Films
Panchwa Paratha: The Horrors of Poverty
Bringing to light the harsh realities of the people living in poverty, Panchwa Paratha is bound to keep you up all night.

The reality of poverty is not lost on us, but rarely do we truly factor in the devastating effects of poverty. Hunger and starvation are often considered synonymous with poverty. The struggle of trying to survive is the first one that a person stricken with poverty needs to get over before even considering thriving. Love, friends, and family all take a backseat when your primal urges such as hunger remain unsatiated. And that’s exactly the kind of harsh reality that the short film, Panchwa Paratha highlights.
Panchwa Paratha: A Closer Look
Directed by Sanjay Gupta, the film Panchwa Paratha is set in the early years of India before the horror of the Emergency unfolded. Set in 1972, Kanpur, the film focuses on just one family of four living in rather dilapidated conditions and trying to get by each day with whatever they earn that day. A simple story of a family trying to make ends meet with a happy smile soon takes a turn for the worse as poverty brings out the worst in everyone.
The climax of the film Panchwa Paratha is what is bound to make you stare and ponder out of the window for the rest of the night. The way the director has built up the anticipation to the very last minute and the expression of anguish and sadness on the faces of the actors convey certain emotions so deep that it’s hard to comprehend them in a few words. The beauty of this entire film is the simplicity of it all. With one or two settings and simple dialogues, the film Panchwa Paratha managed to touch even the ruthless and careless hearts.
Keeping everything simple is not an easy ball game especially when it comes to films but making it interesting with characters that carry more depth with their facial expressions than their words will surely make a film a hit. And that’s exactly what Panchwa Paratha did with their exceptional cast and simple dialogues.
Afterword
Panchwa Paratha will arouse a cocktail of emotions in a person. Ranging from pity to sadness to horror, it is bound to keep you on the edge of your seats. A simple act of a poverty-stricken person will haunt you for generations to come.
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