Production
During a trip to Cox’s Bazar, Piu meets Raownak, a boy from her own town. Amid the waves and sunsets, a tender romance blooms. But after returning home, Piu discovers Raownak’s hidden truth—he belongs to a powerful, controversial family. Torn between love and reality, she must decide whether to trust her heart or let their story fade away like the sea’s distant waves.
One morning, Raha’s beloved cat, Meu, suddenly goes missing. Unable to find Meu, Raha becomes deeply distressed. Amid the many complications and struggles within her family, Meu had been her only source of comfort. In the journey to find her beloved cat, Raha comes face to face with a new realization about life.
Tears hidden behind laughter, a quiet love tucked between family quarrels, and the struggle of a comedian trying to survive a life that is anything but humorous. In a joyless household, and enchanted by an unfamiliar woman, Shamsuzzaman finds himself lost as a duel between comedy and crisis begins in his life.
I have seen a leader’s joys and sorrows, what matters and what doesn’t, the shades of black and white—yet I lose my place, just because I am considered old. Perhaps loyalty doesn’t always have a price.
The third anthological short from Pett Kata Shaw. One day while wandering around, a couple reaches a village from where every Bengali superstition originated. A boatman and an old woman start telling them the stories behind the superstitions. Each story behind each one is weirder, more bizarre than the other.
For a young woman jogging in a park, a stranger begins telling the story of a giant cockroach. But has the cockroach invaded a home, a mind, or society itself?
In the battle of social media, we're all captains. If the battlefield keeps advancing until it reaches the corner of our own homes, a captain won't run away, will he?
Ira grows up in the hollow of absence. A mother too distant, a father who never arrives. At university, she collides with Maruf, a grounded young man running a food cart to support his family. Their clashes soon give way to a quiet, unexpected tenderness. But when her estranged mother resurfaces, buried wounds threaten to undo everything. Through tears, uneasy reconciliations, and small acts of care, Ira learns that love is not an escape but a choice, a decision to stay, to show up. With a handful of balloons and a full heart, she chooses Maruf. Behind them, a still Ferris wheel glows in the dusk a silent promise that even when life halts, love endures.
Second anthological short from Pett Kata Shaw. Based on the folklore that Jinns are attracted to sweets and invade sweet shops at night. A Jinn appears to sweet shop named 'Mishti Kichu' and asks for sweets to its forgetful owner.
First anthological short from Pett Kata Shaw. Based on the popular myth that witches can visit when one is cooking fish.