With
Soumitra Chatterjee as a narrator, the documentary begins by showcasing some of the drawings by
Sukumar Ray, drawn for the children books
Abol Tabol,
HaJaBaRaLa and a short story,
Heshoram Hushiarer Diary (The Diary of Heshoram: The Clever). Explaining the lineage of Ray family starting from Hari Krishna Roy Chowdhury and
Upendrakishore Ray, the documentary describes initial days of Sukumar Ray, his formation of the "Nonsense Group" in the college and publication of handwritten humorous magazine, "Thirty Two and a Half Fries".
Utpal Dutt enacts as a teacher from Ray's first published poetical "nonsense"-play
Jhala Pala (The Cacophony) and provides humorous explanation/translation of the sentence "I go up, we go down" in Bengali. Soumitra Chatterjee appears as
Rama, the
avatar of the Hindu god
Vishnu, in a spoof based on an Indian epic
Ramayana,
Lakshmaner Shaktishel (The magical spear of
Lakshmana). The spoof is based on Rama's dream about the central antagonist of the
Ramayana, the demon-king
Ravana and the spy (
Tapen Chatterjee) providing further information about it. The documentary also focusses on Ray's college days in London while studying photography, lithography and his meeting with
Nobel Prize–winning littérateur,
Rabindranath Tagore. While narrating his first poem
Khichudi (The mixture) published in children's magazine,
Sandesh, launched by his father, the documentary explains how entire Ray family worked together for the growth of the magazine after the death of Upendrakishore Ray. Mentioning his association with
Brahmo Samaj, the documentary ends with Sukumar Ray's terminal disease and his death on 10 September 1923. ==Credits==