Experiencing Interruptions?

Chayachitram

In a quiet riverside village, 11-year-old Suri is known for his mischief—stealing mangoes, breaking pots, and causing a stir among the neighbors. Raised by his stern but loving grandmother Lakshmamma, Suri’s mischief hides a deep emotional void: he has never seen a photo of his late mother, Chaya.
One day, after another scolding and slap from Lakshmamma, Suri sits quietly outside the shop of kind-hearted Siva, a local shopkeeper in his 30s. Siva comforts him with an ice cream and casually mentions Suri’s resemblance to his mother. Curious, Suri demands to know more, but Siva dodges the question. That night, Suri confronts Lakshmamma about his mother. After initial resistance, she finally opens up: Chaya was a bright and beautiful woman, widowed young when Suri’s father died in a train crash. She returned to the village, but during a massive flood, she was lost—her body and photos swept away.
Haunted by this incomplete picture, Suri dreams of his mother, but her face is always blurred. His longing grows. He begins searching the house and eventually finds a damaged photo negative. Siva helps him take it to the local photographer, but it's too ruined to develop. Undeterred, Suri follows every lead—his mother’s school, a childhood friend, the panchayat office—only to find more dead ends. Each failure chips away at his spirit.
Frustrated and broken, Suri disappears next day. Siva finds him by the riverbank, angrily shouting at the river for taking his mother. “Why didn’t you take me too?” he cries. Siva, moved to tears, carries the boy home on his shoulder, silently.
Back at the shop, Suri sits in defeat, convinced he’ll never see his mother’s face. Then, in a quiet, powerful moment, Siva pulls out an old photo from his wallet—one half of a torn picture of him and Chaya. He gives it to Suri. For the first time, Suri sees his mother. Tears stream down his face as he hugs Siva, and the emotional bond between them deepens.
In a flashback, we see young Chaya telling Siva she’s leaving for Madras for her wedding—unaware of Siva’s silent love for her. As Suri hugs him now, the two torn halves of the photo reunite, symbolically healing a long-held wound.
CHAYACHITRAM is a tender tale of memory, loss, love, and the innocent yearning of a child to know the face of the person he came from.

  • Sai Sreenivas K
    Director
  • Sai Sreenivas K
    Writer
  • Annapurna College of Film and Media
    Producer
  • Kaliyug
    Key Cast
    " Suri"
  • Akhil Bhaneshwar
    Key Cast
    "Shiva"
  • Yeshwant Kumar A
    Director of Photography
  • Snehith Pamarathi
    Editor
  • Radha Yadwadkar
    Sound Designer
  • Priya Lahoti
    Executive Producer
  • Project Type:
    Student
  • Genres:
    Coming-of-Age Drama, Drama
  • Runtime:
    17 minutes 23 seconds
  • Completion Date:
    June 1, 2025
  • Production Budget:
    626,000 INR
  • Country of Origin:
    India
  • Country of Filming:
    India
  • Language:
    Telugu
  • Shooting Format:
    Digital
  • Aspect Ratio:
    2.39:1
  • Film Color:
    Color
  • First-time Filmmaker:
    Yes
  • Student Project:
    Yes - Annapurna College of Film and Media
  • Digital Cinema Package:
    Unavailable
  • 24 International Student Film and Video Festival (ISFVF) 2025
    Beijing
    China
    November 7, 2025
    China Premiere
    Official Selection
Director Biography - Sai Sreenivas K

K.Sai Sreenivas Chowdary is an emerging writer-director with a strong passion for
visual storytelling. He is currently completing his degree in filmmaking, where he
has developed a deep interest in crafting emotionally rich and visually grounded
narratives. Inspired by filmmakers like Christopher Nolan and rooted in Indian
culture and folklore, his stories often explore memory, identity, and human
resilience through striking imagery and layered screenplays.
His filmmaking style blends grounded realism with elements of mystery, science
fiction, and psychological drama. Sreenivas focuses on character-driven stories
that connect emotionally, often using strong visual metaphors, natural settings,
and minimal dialogue to convey complex themes. He brings a unique perspective
that bridges tradition and the future, with a cinematic vision that aims to both
move and provoke the audience.
Sreenivas continues to explore new forms and genres, constantly evolving as a
filmmaker while staying true to his core values of storytelling with depth, purpose,
and visual poetry

Add Director Biography
Director Statement

Chayachitram is a deeply personal story rooted in memory, absence, and longing. At its heart is a child’s innocent quest to see his mother’s face—a simple desire carrying immense emotional weight. I wanted to explore how memories live on not just in photographs, but in stories, silences, and the people around us. Visually, the film will flow like memory itself—warm, nostalgic tones for the past, soft natural light for the present, and water as a recurring metaphor for loss and rebirth. The village setting is not just a backdrop but a living character that holds generational emotions. Through Suri’s eyes, we rediscover the heartbreak of not knowing, the comfort of human connection, and the quiet beauty of unspoken love. This is a story for everyone who has searched for a lost face—and found unexpected warmth in its place.