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

Tokri review sangita ekka watercolor painting i will die an artist.

“Tokri” and hopes from the basket by a Mumbai girl

Sangita Ekka, July 26, 2020March 23, 2023

For me, the definition of an excellent animated movie has always revolved around Disney, Pixar, Ghibli, Anime, and accessible movies from French animation studios. Brilliant stories and animation from these studios have always left an impact. They are entertaining and informative but remain largely non-relatable.

These movies were subtly a beautiful introduction to something foreign.

AD

Tokri teleports you to a commoner’s life in the mega-city of Mumbai, where a small family of three shares a tiny house. The set is crafted in jaw-dropping details, from the room’s contents to the characters’ attire. That tiny room has little secrets of its own. The daughter discovers them and causes a minor accident. That is where the unpredictable 15-minute short story of Tokri leaps.

The script demands the street life of Mumbai to come into frame.  There is a signal, moving vehicles, people in those vehicles, and roadside shops that precisely look like an Indian shops. No stone is left unturned to give a realistic feel.

The background score reminded me of Mary and Max, another highly recommended stop-motion movie based on real life. Tokri has traces of cello which beautifully blends with pieces that are more Indian.

As the movie progresses, no character utters a word in human language. This makes Tokri available to a global audience. There is no language barrier. All the communications are done via the characters’ actions and facial expressions, which is, unarguably, a remarkable feat.

The whole time Tokri drips love – the love between a small family, the love for the achievements and souvenirs, and the love for the craft of stop-motion animation.

Tokri is familiar, it was screened at the 15th Mumbai Film Festival in 2018, and it bothers me that many viewers of animation movies discovered it late, including me. Though short, it gave me a sense of relatability and awe, a feeling I have only found in the Disney movies of the 90s, some select French animations, and from Studio Ghibli.

Tokri gives me hope that the animation industry in India is not dry, nor in Pakistan, that there are stories that can emerge from the nooks and corners of this country and make their mark. I hope that, like in Japan, where Manga and Anime are a part of the culture, animation in India will not be “cartoony” and viewed as appropriate only for children but as an independent art form of storytelling and bringing them to life.

Here you watch Tokri:

Award-Winning Stop Motion Animated Short | Tokri (The Basket)

Once you are done watching the movie, watch behind the scenes:

Tokri (The Basket) Behind the Scenes – Animating Tokri

AD

 

Reading between frames Reviews Review

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Reading between frames Pathology in the hundred acre wood

A “Peer Review” of Pathology in the Hundred-Acre Wood Ft. Inside Out

April 13, 2025

In December 2000, neurodevelopmental scientists, fascinated by A. A. Milne’s popular storybook Winnie the Pooh, published an earnest paper diagnosing our beloved, honey-loving character and his friends with difficult-sounding words from the diagnosis bible they call the DSM-IV. The research points to attention deficiency in Pooh along with a possibility…

Read More
Listicles Animated desires from mubi review

Unwrapping Animated Desires by Mubi

June 14, 2025

Mubi.com has listed short films titled “Animated Desires” that explore the range of human sexuality and its expression. A befitting list to explore on every Pride Month, I wanted to approach the films as an asexual and discover what sexuality looks like on the spectrum. AD Nun or Never What…

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

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 Anime Aniruddh Menon Art Belgium China Disney Dreamworks Estonia Finland France GenAI Haseeb Rehman Hayao Miyazaki India IP Iran Ireland Israel Japan Kati Macskássy Malaysia Manga Movie Naruto Non-Ghibli numbers Painting Pakistan 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

Overall Rating
4.0

Rating

©2026 Sangita Ekka | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes