'The Summer of Miracles' narrates a nine-year old boy's obsession to become invisible, his relentless efforts to achieve that and the consequences of his actions on people around him.
When a nine year old boy's obsession to become invisible gets out of hand, his family decides to intervene. Although it seems to solve the immediate problem, their tactic pushes the boy further into a world of his imagination. Adding to his confusion is the arrival of his teenage cousin who seems to have a secret of her own. It is an eventful summer vacation where each one's fantasy world would collide with reality and leave them scarred. 'The Summer of Miracles' is an experiment in subtlety, trying to create realistic drama by limiting exposition and emotional manipulation.—Iceskating In Tropics
Inspired by the H.G.Wells novel, nine-year-old Anand is obsessed with becoming invisible and dabbles in increasingly dangerous experiments. The tactics of his distraught family pushes him further into a world of his imagination. Adding to the mystery is the arrival of his teenage cousin who seems to have a secret of her own. "The Summer of Miracles" unfolds in two narratives. The manifest one speaks of loss, the bite of reality and the imaginary worlds we enclose ourselves in to find reprieve. Meanwhile a latent narrative, in which everyone is a metaphor, unravels the stark political reality of contemporary India.—Brownhorse Productions