In Culture — Movies, Books, Games
Pret in movies, books, TV shows, video games, and art history
In Popular Culture
| Type | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Television | Aahat / Fear Files (Various episodes) | Multiple episodes across Indian horror anthology shows have depicted Pret hauntings — the dead family member who returns because rites were incomplete. These episodes are effective because the premise is instantly recognizable to every Indian household. |
| Film | Stree (2018) | While the entity in Stree is not technically a Pret, the film draws heavily on the folk logic of the restless dead — a spirit whose unfinished business keeps it bound to a specific place and community. The ritual-based resolution echoes Pret-liberation traditions. |
| Literature | Garuda Purana (Multiple translations) | The primary text. Describes the Pret state in vivid, systematic detail — the journey of the soul, the 13-day rites, the consequences of failure. Read in many Hindu households during the mourning period. More instruction manual than scripture. |
| Film | Tumbbad (2018) | Though centered on a different entity, Tumbbad's themes of ancestral debt, incomplete rituals, and generational haunting resonate deeply with Pret lore. The idea that the dead can trap the living through unfulfilled obligations is pure Pret logic. |
| Cultural Practice | Pitru Paksha (Annual Observance) | Not a movie or book — but the largest cultural expression of Pret belief. Every year during the dark fortnight of Ashwin (September-October), millions of Indians perform shraddha for their ancestors. Gaya receives over a million pilgrims. This is Pret mythology made into calendar. |
ACCURACY RATING: DEEPLY EMBEDDED IN LIVING PRACTICE · CULTURAL BEDROCK
Detailed Reviews
Film
Tumbbad (2018)
Tumbbad is not a Pret film — its central entity is Hastar, a forgotten god — but its thematic architecture is pure Pret logic. The film depicts generational debt to the dead, the consequences of incomplete ritual transactions, and the idea that the past does not release you until you settle your accounts. Vinayak Rao's obsessive return to the ancestral well is the journey to Gaya in horror-film disguise: a descendant traveling to a specific site to complete unfinished business with the dead. Director Rahi Anil Barve builds dread not through jump scares but through the suffocating weight of obligation — the same weight that defines the Pret haunting. The film's ending, in which the debt is finally called in and the cost is total, is the Pret's warning made cinematic: the longer you delay what you owe the dead, the higher the interest.
Sacred Text / Reference
Garuda Purana — Board of Scholars Translation (Chowkhamba Sanskrit Series)
Reading the Garuda Purana as literature — rather than as the ritual manual it functions as — is a disorienting experience. The text oscillates between passages of extraordinary poetic intensity (the description of the soul's post-death journey through landscapes of desolation is genuinely haunting prose) and passages of meticulous procedural instruction (exactly how many grains of sesame per pind, exactly which mantra at which step). This combination — poetry and bureaucracy, dread and checklist — is what makes the Garuda Purana the foundational Pret text. It understands that the horror of the Pret is not supernatural malevolence but administrative failure: a form not filed, a process not followed, a soul stuck in processing. The Chowkhamba edition, with its extensive Sanskrit commentary, reveals layers of interpretation that popular translations miss.
Academic Ethnography
Death in Banaras by Jonathan Parry (1994)
Parry's ethnography of Varanasi's death industry is the single most important modern text for understanding how the Pret concept functions in living practice. By embedding himself in the community of priests, cremation workers, and pilgrims who make their living from death at Manikarnika Ghat, Parry reveals the Pret not as a belief but as an economic and social institution. The Mahabrahmana priests who receive gifts on behalf of the dead, the Dom Raja community that tends the cremation fires, the genealogists who track which families have unresolved ancestral debts — all operate within a system where the Pret is as real and as consequential as any commercial contract. Parry's great achievement is showing that the question 'Is the Pret real?' is the wrong question. The right question is: 'What does the Pret make possible?' — and the answer is an entire social architecture of obligation, economy, and structured grief.
Film
Stree (2018)
Stree is a comedy-horror film set in Chanderi, Madhya Pradesh, about a town haunted by a female spirit. While the entity is not technically a Pret, the film's resolution — which involves acknowledging the spirit's legitimate grievance and giving it what it was denied — follows Pret logic perfectly. The spirit in Stree does not want destruction; it wants recognition. It wants the living to complete something that was left undone. The film's genius is wrapping this deeply Indian ghost logic in a package that is funny, accessible, and commercially viable. It proved that Indian audiences respond to ghost stories rooted in obligation and ritual rather than imported Western horror tropes.
Tantric Literature / Analysis
Shava Sadhana: The Practice of the Corpse
This collection of translated tantric texts dealing with death, corpses, and the spirits of the dead provides an alternative perspective on the Pret from within the tantric tradition. While the Puranic/Brahminical approach to the Pret is one of liberation through prescribed rites, the tantric approach is more ambivalent: certain tantric practices actively seek out Pret-inhabited spaces (cremation grounds, crossroads at night) and attempt to harness the Pret's energy for spiritual power. This is the shadow side of Pret belief — the idea that a trapped spirit's desperation can be channeled rather than resolved. The texts are disturbing not because of any explicit horror but because they treat the Pret as a resource to be exploited, inverting the compassionate logic of the mainstream tradition.
Influence Analysis
The Pret's influence on Indian cinema is paradoxically both pervasive and invisible. Unlike the Churel or Bhoot, which have named, specific film depictions, the Pret operates as an underlying grammar — a set of narrative assumptions that shape how Indian horror films construct their stories without the Pret ever being named. The pattern of 'family member dies, rites are incomplete, household is haunted, rites are completed, haunting resolves' is the default plot structure of Indian horror. Films from the 1949 Mahal to the 2023 Munjya use this structure even when they name their entity something else.
The Pret concept has profoundly influenced Indian television, particularly the long-running horror anthology format. Shows like Aahat, Fear Files, and Ssshhhh... Koi Hai have aired hundreds of episodes across decades, and a significant percentage follow the Pret template: a family experiences supernatural disturbances traced back to a death where the rites were not properly performed. These shows reach audiences of tens of millions and function as the primary vector through which Pret lore reaches urban, semi-modern households that might not engage with traditional oral storytelling.
In literature, the Pret has inspired a distinct subgenre of Hindi and regional-language short fiction focused on 'the returning dead.' Writers like Premchand (early 20th century) and Harishankar Parsai used Pret-adjacent narratives to critique social structures — the pressure on families to have sons (who can perform death rites), the economic burden of elaborate funeral ceremonies on poor families, and the exploitation of grief by priestly establishments. The Pret story, in these literary hands, becomes a vehicle for social commentary disguised as supernatural fiction.
The Pret's influence extends beyond horror into the mainstream of Indian cultural production. Bollywood family dramas regularly include scenes of shraddha, Pitru Paksha observance, and ancestor-related ritual without treating them as horror elements — they are simply part of the texture of family life. The audience understands these scenes because the Pret concept is the invisible foundation: the reason families perform these rites is the same reason the rites exist in the Garuda Purana. The Pret doesn't need to be named for its influence to be felt.
Global Adaptations
| Country | Adaptation |
|---|---|
| Japan | The Japanese horror tradition has independently developed narratives closely paralleling the Pret through the concept of 'onryō' (vengeful spirit) and 'yūrei' (ghost). Films like Ju-On (The Grudge) and Ringu, while not directly adapted from Pret lore, share the core mechanism of a spirit trapped by unfinished business whose presence causes progressive household decay. The Japanese 'Obon' festival — during which families welcome ancestral spirits home and then ritually send them back — is functionally identical to Pitru Paksha. When Pret-themed Indian content reaches Japanese audiences, the recognition is immediate because the underlying belief system is structurally identical. |
| Thailand / Southeast Asia | Thai Buddhist culture has its own Pret tradition — the 'Pret' (เปรต) is a well-known figure in Thai folklore, directly descended from the same Sanskrit root as the Hindu Pret. Thai Pret are depicted in temple murals as towering, emaciated figures with distended bellies and pin-thin necks, suffering in the Preta realm. The annual 'Sart Thai' festival includes offerings to Pret spirits. Thai horror cinema frequently features Pret-type entities, blending Hindu-Buddhist cosmology with local folk traditions. The 2004 film Shutter, while not explicitly about a Pret, uses the imagery of a spirit attached to the living due to unresolved obligations. |
| Nepal | Nepali tradition maintains the Pret concept with minimal deviation from the Indian original, owing to shared Hindu-Buddhist cultural foundations. The annual 'Gai Jatra' (Cow Festival) in the Kathmandu Valley is partly a Pret-liberation ritual: families who lost members during the year process through the streets, and the festival combines mourning, humor, and ritual feeding of the dead. The Pashupatinath Temple in Kathmandu functions as Nepal's equivalent of Varanasi's Manikarnika Ghat — a site where cremation and death rites carry amplified spiritual power. |
| United States / United Kingdom (Indian Diaspora) | The Indian diaspora has created entirely new forms of Pret-related practice in response to the challenge of performing Hindu death rites in non-Hindu countries. Hindu temples in Houston, London, Leicester, and New Jersey have developed adapted shraddha and pind-daan ceremonies that can be performed locally. Some diaspora communities organize group pilgrimages to Gaya during Pitru Paksha. Others use video-conferencing to connect the diaspora family member with a priest performing rites at Gaya on their behalf. The Pret concept has driven the creation of a small but significant industry of 'ritual facilitation services' catering to NRIs (Non-Resident Indians) who need to complete ancestral rites from abroad. |
| China | The Chinese Hungry Ghost Festival (Yu Lan / Zhongyuan) is the most direct functional parallel to Pitru Paksha, rooted in the same Buddhist Preta concept that shares Sanskrit origins with the Hindu Pret. During the seventh lunar month, the gates of the underworld are believed to open and hungry ghosts roam the earth. Families burn joss paper (representing money and goods for the dead), offer food at roadside altars, and perform operas and rituals to appease the spirits. The parallel to Pitru Paksha is structural: both are annual periods dedicated to feeding and pacifying the restless dead through communal ritual action. |