Nishir Daak
A young NGO worker living in Cox's Bazaar hears stories about a voice that calls young children into the water, to their death. Should he continue his job as a change maker, or confront the supernatural to create real change?
A young NGO worker living in Cox's Bazaar hears stories about a voice that calls young children into the water, to their death. Should he continue his job as a change maker, or confront the supernatural to create real change?
"Pett Kata Shaw" takes the darkest most nefarious Bengali folk tales that survived generations and gives them a modern twist. Our stories and our culture must live on. Ghost stories too.
First anthological short from Pett Kata Shaw. Based on the popular myth that witches can visit when one is cooking fish.
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.
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.