iWorld
Junglee Music, Windows Production partner for seven Bengali films
Collaboration begins with Phool Pishi O Edward releasing on 29 May 2026.
MUMBAI: When Bengali cinema strikes the right chord, it rarely whispers, it sings, sways and stays in your head long after the credits roll. Junglee Music, the music label division of Times Music, is turning up the volume on its relationship with Windows Production through a new seven-film partnership aimed at deepening their footprint in Bengali cinema. The collaboration also arrives at a symbolic moment for Windows Production, which is celebrating 25 years in the industry.
The renewed alliance builds on a creative partnership that has already delivered several memorable Bengali film soundtracks and storytelling-led projects over the years. This time, however, the duo appears to be thinking bigger and longer-term.
The seven-film slate will open with Phool Pishi O Edward, scheduled to release on 29 May 2026. Positioned as the first title in this anniversary-led collaboration, the film is already drawing attention among Bengali cinema audiences for its unusual title, narrative intrigue and music-led appeal.
In an industry increasingly chasing pan-India formulas, the partnership doubles down on regional storytelling, a space where music often does more than decorate scenes. In Bengali cinema especially, songs frequently carry emotional memory, cultural texture and audience nostalgia in equal measure.
That seems to be the core idea driving the collaboration. Junglee Music and Windows Production are betting that strong music and rooted storytelling still make for a powerful cinematic combination, even in an era dominated by algorithms and short-form attention spans.
The partnership also signals growing confidence in regional entertainment markets, where Bengali cinema continues carving a distinctive identity through content-led narratives rather than scale-driven spectacle.
As Windows Production enters its 25th year, the collaboration feels less like a routine business extension and more like a creative anniversary tour, one that aims to package stories, songs and sentiment into seven separate theatrical outings.
And if Bengali cinema has taught audiences anything over the years, it is this, the best stories often arrive with a melody attached.




