Nine out of ten times, you keep scrolling until you pass out or both of you settle on re-watching the over-watched FRIENDS episodes (seriously, you've got to stop!). If all this rings true to your ears, here are 5 Indian short films you can watch for free on YouTube!
A short film named “Diary of a Genocide” was released on 14th December 2022, Martyred Intellectuals Day. This 4-minute and 26-second-long film is based on the historic incident of 14th December during the Liberation War in Bangladesh. On this day, Pakistani rulers, with the help of Razakars, Al-Badrs, and Al-Shams created a blueprint to destroy Bangladesh’s (then-East Pakistan’s) intellectual foundation and render the country metaphorically paralyzed. An unexplored horror-map, the treachery of how these intellectuals were abducted is still shrouded, this movie offers a visual picture of this little-known chapter of history.
With the independent filmmakers of Bangladesh and India, Baundule The Short Film Festival recently took place in Chandannagar, West Bengal. Bangladeshi film Putul Jibon has bagged two awards in two of the categories, including Best Film Director and Best Actor awards at the festival.
Much hyped short film “Mukhosh Manush—The Fake” is now being remade as a feature film. The first trailer of the film has already crossed three million views on video sharing site YouTube, an unprecedented number for Bangladeshi films, according to a press release.
Nine out of ten times, you keep scrolling until you pass out or both of you settle on re-watching the over-watched FRIENDS episodes (seriously, you've got to stop!). If all this rings true to your ears, here are 5 Indian short films you can watch for free on YouTube!
A short film named “Diary of a Genocide” was released on 14th December 2022, Martyred Intellectuals Day. This 4-minute and 26-second-long film is based on the historic incident of 14th December during the Liberation War in Bangladesh. On this day, Pakistani rulers, with the help of Razakars, Al-Badrs, and Al-Shams created a blueprint to destroy Bangladesh’s (then-East Pakistan’s) intellectual foundation and render the country metaphorically paralyzed. An unexplored horror-map, the treachery of how these intellectuals were abducted is still shrouded, this movie offers a visual picture of this little-known chapter of history.
With the independent filmmakers of Bangladesh and India, Baundule The Short Film Festival recently took place in Chandannagar, West Bengal. Bangladeshi film Putul Jibon has bagged two awards in two of the categories, including Best Film Director and Best Actor awards at the festival.
Much hyped short film “Mukhosh Manush—The Fake” is now being remade as a feature film. The first trailer of the film has already crossed three million views on video sharing site YouTube, an unprecedented number for Bangladeshi films, according to a press release.