Dadasaheb Phalke made the first animation film in 1915 called Agkadyanchi Mouj - The Game of Match Sticks. In India, starting from the 1950s, animated films of short duration were made by the Film Division to create awareness on important social issues like family planning, for instance, Baap re Baap (1968) by Ram Mohan and produced by the Family Planning Association of India which won the National Award for the Best non-feature animation film. The other important issue that the Films Division covered was national integration. Their 7 min long production Ek Anek aur Ekta (1974), directed by Vijaya Mulay and Bhimsain aired on Doordarshan and became very popular among children, especially its Vasant Desai-composed theme song Ek chidiya, anek chidiyan. Full-length animation feature films commenced at the start of the new millennium, with Pandavas – The Five Warriors (2000), directed by Usha Ganesarajah, being one of the first. Animation feature films have, by and large, centred around Indian mythological characters (Krishna, 2006, Ghatothkach, 2007) and their variants, like the Chhota Bheem series. These films have been of relatively shorter duration, ranging from 90-110 minutes and have evidently targeted the children. In other words, they have had a limited reach. But then, the cost of production of an animation feature film is prohibitively high. Are Indian production houses suitably equipped? For example, the budget for the animated comedy-drama Finding Dory (2016) was USD 200 million. Its worldwide addressable market justified the investment. Do Indian animated films command a scale that big? Even if a Bollywood production house were to find that amount of money, do we have sufficient experience to make a classy film in an animation format? Even a high-budget Kochadaiiyaan (2014) was termed a ‘bad puppet show’ with ‘substandard animation’.