Skip to content
Sangita Ekka Sangita Ekka

Sharing my connectome

  • Creator Economy
    • Arts
    • Digital Marketing
  • Marketplace
  • Reviews
    • Reading between frames
    • Reading between lines
    • Listicles
  • Cancelled Cartoons
  • Shorts
  • Opinion
  • About Me
Sangita Ekka
Sangita Ekka

Sharing my connectome

Kandittund-Seen-it-fanart-by-sangita-ekka

Kandittund! (Seen it!) is black and white nostalgia

Sangita Ekka, December 5, 2021June 26, 2024

One of the perks of growing up in India is that we have so many local ghost stories and there are as many creative variations as the number of storytellers. Kandittund! (Seen it!) in essence is one such story of a storyteller.

This time (during the making of this short animated movie), the storyteller happens to be 89 year old – Mr. P.N.K Panicker who has left no stone unturned to tell his imaginative renditions of ghost stories to his kids, grandkids, and complete strangers in Kerala’s tea shops and bakeries. 

AD

 

Studio Eeksaurus has picked up these stories and given these ghosts a form. The narration is in Malayalam – the primary language spoken in Kerala and is more like a conversation between Mr. Panicker and his son. The narrator makes hushed acknowledgments as Mr. Panicker continues his mixed-up-spirited stories.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by live@eeksaurus (@studioeeksaurus)

This short movie is black and white, which, I think, fits well with the theme and also feels drastically different from Tokri, which has secured a permanent place in my list of favorites. 

While there are no language barriers in a silent movie, the dependency on subtitles for Kandittund makes you pace. And so, I watched it twice and thrice to catch up on the details and read the comments on YouTube to peep into the sentiments of Keralites who would have picked up the nuances I was bound to miss. 

Studio Eeksaurus later released a Hindi dub of this short film, and the voiceover is on point! The authenticity of how a Malayali person speaks in Hindi adds to the charm. Mr. Panicker’s voice brings back the childhood nostalgia of listening to stories.

Overall, Kandittund is adorable and funny, with an undertone of brilliantly capturing an everyday local affair. If I were in Kerala, knew Malayalam, and were caught off-guard in a tea shop, I wouldn’t mind hearing how ghosts got electrocuted or why EENAM-PECHI collects raw mangoes, or about my favorite from the lot – ARUKOLA.

We have come across so many mummies, zombies, nuns, and dolls, but an Arukola with a single slipper on? Well, that’s got to count for something.

Directed by Adithi Krishnadas, Kandittund (Seen it!) won the 69th National Award for Best Animation Film.

A wonderfully made short movie and a recommended watch.

Reading between frames Reviews Shorts India

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Reading between frames Ernest and Celestine review sangita ekka i will die an artist

An artist’s role as per “Ernest and Célestine”

May 29, 2020September 2, 2023

“Bears above and mice below?” Sometimes, the most important life lessons come from books and movies written for children. Ernest and Célestine is one of them. What initially seems like another light-hearted fairy tale, Ernest and Célestine slowly takes the route of intrigue. AD The movie is an adaptation of…

Read More
Reading between frames itachi-uchiha-farewell-sangita-ekka-i-will-die-an-artist

Itachi Uchiha – The Konohagakure Ninja

March 14, 2020July 15, 2022

Naruto universe is huge, complex and THE MOST emotionally deep story ever presented to mankind.   Aired for 15 years, Naruto and the later episodes under Naruto Shippuden is a story of an orphan boy who never gave up on his dream – to become the Hokage, the highest position…

Read More
Reading between frames A coffee vending machine and its sword

A Coffee Vending Machine and its Sword Review

February 1, 2026

A Coffee Vending Machine and its Sword, if the name sounds a bit weird, you are feeling right. A South Korean short film released in 2007, it explores a not-so-deep plot about a boy who reincarnates as a coffee vending machine and fights his enemies who pop in and out…

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Support My Work!

Buy Me a Coffee

2D 3D Aditya Bharadwaj AI Anime Aniruddh Menon Art Belgium China Creepy Disney Dreamworks Finland France GenAI Haseeb Rehman Hayao Miyazaki India IP Iran Israel Japan Kati Macskássy Malaysia Manga Movie Naruto Non-Ghibli Painting Pakistan Periods Poland Review Sandhya Visvanathan Savera Jahan Shoumik Biswas Sourav Roychoudhury South Korea Stop Motion Stop Motion Animation Studio Ghibli UK USA Vaibhavi Studios Watercolor Experiences

©2026 Sangita Ekka | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes