Updated On: 23 January, 2025 07:25 AM IST | Mumbai | Mohar Basu
Sweet Dreams maker Pranjal Khandhdiya emphasises the need for slice-of-life films amid an overdose of dark and gory offerings

(From left) Amol Parashar and Mithila Palkar in the film
Look at producer Pranjal Khandhdiya’s previous films, Rashmi Rocket (2021) and Dhak Dhak (2023), and you’ll notice his penchant for stories that are rooted in the everyday world. His next, Sweet Dreams, too is a slice-of-life story. Revolving around two strangers connected by the surreal world of dreams, the Mithila Palkar and Amol Parashar-fronted film questions whether love finds us or if it’s the other way around. Khandhdiya says that the feel-good story is the antidote to the dark and violent movies that are dominating the current landscape. “Today, violence, profanity, gore, and crime have [become part of] all genres in cinema. They provide an adrenaline rush and huge box-office numbers, but we are a thali-loving nation. We crave a mix of all nine emotions. As makers, we must address the need to create slice-of-life stories and rom-coms,” he says.

Pranjal Khandhdiya