Anurag Kashyap to Present 'Songs of Forgotten Trees,' India’s Sole Venice Orizzonti Selection

Anuparna Roy’s debut feature, which explores an unlikely bond between two migrant women in Mumbai, will premiere at the 82nd Venice Film Festival.

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: JUL 28, 2025, 15:52 IST|5 min read
Anurag Kashyap
Anurag Kashyap

Filmmaker Anurag Kashyap will present Songs of Forgotten Trees, the debut feature from director Anuparna Roy, which is set to premiere at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival. The film is India’s only entry in the Orizzonti section, a strand known for championing innovative and emerging voices in global cinema.

Set in Mumbai, Songs of Forgotten Trees follows the lives of two migrant women—Thooya, an aspiring actor who trades beauty and survival in the city’s margins, and Swetha, a corporate employee who sublets Thooya’s apartment. As the two navigate personal histories and shifting boundaries, a complex connection emerges—one that resists rupture and instead reveals layers of kinship, trauma, and self-discovery.

The film stars Naaz Shaikh and Sumi Baghel, and is produced by Bibhanshu Rai, Romil Modi and Ranjan Singh. It is co-produced by Navin Shetty and Anuparna Roy.

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Kashyap, who is currently preparing for the world premiere of his own film Bandar at the Toronto International Film Festival, praised Roy’s storytelling sensibility. “I have always believed in backing new talent—especially those who want to challenge norms and say something different,” he said in a statement. “Anuparna is definitely one such voice and we feel proud and happy to back her first feature.”

Roy, who self-funded the film while juggling multiple jobs in Mumbai, said she was drawn to stories often overlooked by the mainstream. “Despite having one of the largest film industries in the world, we rarely tell stories of the marginalised—of those excluded by class, caste, and gender,” she said.

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She added that the project was inspired in part by the life of a childhood friend whose early marriage under a failed government scheme left a lasting impression. “This film carries her memories,” Roy said.

Producer Ranjan Singh of Flip Films called Roy a “unique voice” and said he had been compelled to support the feature after seeing her short film Run to the River and hearing an early pitch. “That line stayed with me for the longest time,” he said.

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