Pihu

Pihu is a 2018 Indian drama thriller film written and directed by Vinod Kapri and jointly produced by Ronnie Screwvala, Siddharth Roy Kapur and Shilpa Jindal.[2][3] It stars Pihu (Myra Vishwakarma), a two year old girl, in the title role, who gets trapped inside her house with no escape.[4] Pihu was premiered at the 2018 International Film Festival of India in the Panorama section and was screened at the Fajr International Film Festival.[4][5] It won the Grand Prize for Best Feature Film in the International Competition category and the People's Choice award for Best Film at the 14th Trans-Saharan International Film Festival.[6] The film's official trailer was released on 24 October 2018, and was released theatrically on 16 November 2018.[7][8] The film was shot in the Gandharav society of Greater Noida.

Pihu
Official poster
Directed byVinod Kapri
Produced byRonnie Screwvala
Siddharth Roy Kapur
Shilpa Jindal
Written byVinod Kapri
StarringMyra Vishwakarma
Prerna Sharma
Music byVishal Khurana
CinematographyYogesh Jaini
Edited byIrene Dhar Malik
Sheeba Sehgal
Archit D Rastogi
Production
company
RSVP Moviess
Roy Kapur Films
Distributed byKirshnam Media
Bhagirathi Films
Release date
  • November 2018 (2018-11) (IFFI)
  • 16 November 2018 (2018-11-16) (India)
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi
Budget50 lakhs
Box office2.95 crore[1]

Plot

The movie starts on the day after Pihu's (Myra Vishwakarma) second birthday party. She wakes up and finds that her mother, Puja, (Prerna Sharma) is not waking up. Her father, Gaurav (Rahul Bagga, voice only) has left for Kolkata for a conference. She feels hungry and tries to wake her mother up, but she does not wake up.

It is then revealed that Puja has committed suicide after a fight with Gaurav, and her face and hands are bruised indicating domestic violence, leaving a suicide note on the bedroom mirror, saying that she would've killed Pihu too, but couldn't bring herself to do it. Pooja was upset because Gaurav had come late for Pihu's birthday party; Moreover, she suspected him of having an affair with her friend, Meera. Gaurav continuously attempts to call Pooja, but to no response. Pihu manages to pick up the phone but her father is not able to understand her, asking to speak to Pooja. Gaurav says that he has erroneously left the iron switched on and asks her to turn it off because Pihu might touch it. Shortly after, Pihu burns her fingers. She also almost electrocutes herself with exposed wires and burns two rotis in the microwave and on the stove, trying to make food for herself. She turns on the geyser (water heater), which after a few hours explodes, causing a large bang that concerns the other tenants of the apartment block and she hangs on the balcony railing trying to get her fallen doll. Luckily, a lady sees Pihu hanging dangerously and persuades her to get down. The electricity also fluctuates multiple times. The tap water overflows and comes out of the main door. Neighbors see the water, but think the owners are on holiday.

Gaurav calls multiple times throughout the movie from Kolkata, even trying to apologise on phone to Pooja for the fight, through Pihu. He realises that something is wrong when Pihu tells him that Pooja has been sleeping all day, and leaves Kolkata immediately for home. Pihu eats the leftovers from the party, along with few of her mother's sleeping pills lying near her, causing her to fall asleep.

During the night, it is shown that the neighbors are trying to break in the house, seeing smoke emanating from within. Gaurav returns and finds the entire apartment messy and burned, with his wife dead and Pihu playing with her blocks, below the cot. The movie ends with Gaurav mourning, with Pihu unaware of the happenings.

Cast

  • Myra Vishwakarma as Pihu
  • Prerna Vishwakarma as Pooja
  • Rahul Bagga as Gaurav (voice only)
  • Hrishita Bhatt as Meera (voice only)

Production

Director Vinod Kapri said that the idea behind making the film was the question of "what does a toddler do when she is left alone at home?" He also based it on a real life incident that he read in 2014 in a national daily about a four-year-old girl who was left alone at home. He decided to have minimal dialogues in the film, wanted the story to depend on "how the girl behaves", and felt that "every shooting schedule [was] unpredictable."[9] According to him, the film explores issues faced by married couples, and compulsions about the concepts of family and children. Kapri spent four months with the child, getting to know her and familiarise her with the other crew members.[9]

Though the girl had never acted before, Kapri is close friends with her parents, so they agreed for her to act on this project.[9] The film was shot for two hours a day with three cameras placed on the set since Kapri felt "you can’t ask a two-year-old to give another take."[7] Kapri made some changes in the script based on Myra's behavioral patterns.[10] For two months, Myra moved to the flat that was rented for shoot.[10] Kapri had to wait for six months after he had finalised Myra for the film due to production issues. Later, his friend Kishen Kumar came on board as a producer. With a budget of 45 lakh (US$63,000), they started shooting the film, but Kumar suffered a cardiac arrest and Kapri had to again seek help for the film's post-production budget.[10]

gollark: Oh, and the next Intel CPUs should actually be very good, as they're adding 8 smaller low-power cores which are nevertheless apparently around Skylake performance to basically everything.
gollark: They are also making datacenter cards, which were delayed because lol no working 7nm.
gollark: Soon apparently we get "Arc Alchemist", a gaming-oriented card, which is meant to be bigger and have hardware raytracing/matrix multiplication units.
gollark: Currently only DG1, which is just their latest integrated graphics (surprisingly good) on a PCIe card.
gollark: They've begun releasing discrete GPUs.

References

  1. "Pihu Box Office Collection till - Now Bollywood Hungama". Bollywood Hungama.
  2. "Pihu Trailer: Tension is the Hallmark of this Thriller". CNN-News18. 24 October 2018. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  3. "Pihu trailer: This gut-wrenching tale of a 2-year-old left alone at home will make you sit up and take notice". Times Now. 24 October 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  4. Bhowal, Tiasa (24 October 2018). "Pihu Trailer Showcases The Terrifying Tale Of A Two-Year-Old Trapped Alone". NDTV. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  5. Hassandoost, Hassan (3 May 2017). "Review of Pihu". Fajr International Film Festival. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  6. "'Pihu' bags 2 awards at Trans-Saharan International Film Fest". The Times of India. 6 December 2018. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  7. "Pihu trailer: Trapped with a 2-year-old but much scarier". The Indian Express. 24 October 2018. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  8. "'Pihu' trailer: A two-year-old's thrilling story will keep you on the edge of your seat". The Times of India. 24 October 2018. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  9. "Home Alone Filmmaker Vinod Kapri talks about his next film". The Indian Express. 15 May 2015. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
  10. Sahani, Alaka (25 November 2017). "Home Alone, Almost". The Indian Express. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
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