HomeEntertainmentOslo: A tail of promise to premiere at IFFI 2025, John Abraham calls it a tribute to Animal Wisdom

Oslo: A tail of promise to premiere at IFFI 2025, John Abraham calls it a tribute to Animal Wisdom

Oslo: A Tail of Promise premieres at IFFI 2025, tracing the bond between Pooja R Bhale and her husky Oslo. John Abraham presents the documentary as a tribute to healing, compassion and animal wisdom.

November 17, 2025 / 17:26 IST
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Oslo: A tail of promise to premiere at IFFI 2025, John Abraham calls it a tribute to Animal Wisdom
Oslo: A tail of promise to premiere at IFFI 2025, John Abraham calls it a tribute to Animal Wisdom

Oslo: A Tail of Promise is stepping into IFFI 2025 with the kind of quiet power that doesn’t need spectacle to make itself heard. The 56th International Film Festival of India will screen more than 240 films from 81 countries, but this one carries an emotional texture that stands out. India is in the middle of a cultural shift in how it views animals, compassion and coexistence, and this premiere lands right in the heart of that conversation.

The film follows Oslo, a Siberian husky whose presence changed the life of Pooja R Bhale, founder of the Protecterra Ecological Foundation. Instead of telling their story in a straight line, director Isha Pungaliya lets it unfold like memory does – looping, drifting and returning to the moments that shape a bond. The result is a non-linear documentary that captures the instinctive communication between a human and an animal who becomes far more than a companion.

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John Abraham, who presents and produces the film, has long been vocal about animal welfare. His connection to this story is personal. As he puts it, “Animals don’t need us. We need them more, for grounding, for healing, for the unconditional love they offer without ever asking for anything in return. Oslo: A Tail of Promise is a tribute to that truth, and I am grateful that IFFI is giving this story the space it deserves.” The sentiment sits at the core of the documentary. It isn’t just about one woman and her dog. It is about the emotional intelligence of animals and the human refusal, or failure, to recognise it.

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