Anvatt

Vinay meets his subordinate Kamath who arranges their stay at an old depilated mansion which has its tragedy associated of a previous owner 'Saibu' who died unfulfilled on his first night after marriage due to a snakebite which he received while out in the forest to get fragrant Kewra flowers for his new bride Gulab on her demand.

The couple has a house help Baijama who is a distant relative of the dead previous owner who believes that 'Saibu's restless spirit haunts the mansion and only she can appease it with some rituals.

One rainy night, the doctor is at the hospital working late and his wife is visited by Kamath who seems to be possessed by the spirit of Saibu back to fulfil his desires with Gulab.

Next day, the police investigate the issue and take statements from everyone involved where Kamath declines to press any charges on the doctor's wife and vice versa.

Kamath might have been a latent schizophrenic who made an imaginary world of himself being Saibu and saw Gulab in every woman and his schizophrenia got activated as the doctor reprimanded him a couple of times laxness in his work hurting his ego or he might be just a plain pervert taking advantage of the story and the villagers belief.

In the end, the situation is left ambiguous and to the audience interpretation of the movie as the scene cuts back to the village where Kamath watches a marriage procession on his way and sees Gulab instead of the newly wedded bride staring at her incessantly.