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Aranyer Din Ratri

  • 1970
  • 1h 55m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
8,1/10
3,1 k
MA NOTE
Soumitra Chatterjee, Simi Garewal, and Sharmila Tagore in Aranyer Din Ratri (1970)
Drama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueFour carefree, jaded middle-class bachelors from Calcutta head out for a holiday in the wilderness. Before long, each man undergoes their own journey of self-discovery.Four carefree, jaded middle-class bachelors from Calcutta head out for a holiday in the wilderness. Before long, each man undergoes their own journey of self-discovery.Four carefree, jaded middle-class bachelors from Calcutta head out for a holiday in the wilderness. Before long, each man undergoes their own journey of self-discovery.

  • Director
    • Satyajit Ray
  • Writers
    • Sunil Gangopadhyay
    • Satyajit Ray
  • Stars
    • Sharmila Tagore
    • Kaberi Bose
    • Simi Garewal
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    8,1/10
    3,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Satyajit Ray
    • Writers
      • Sunil Gangopadhyay
      • Satyajit Ray
    • Stars
      • Sharmila Tagore
      • Kaberi Bose
      • Simi Garewal
    • 15Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 25Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 2 nominations au total

    Photos31

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    Rôles principaux13

    Modifier
    Sharmila Tagore
    Sharmila Tagore
    • Aparna
    Kaberi Bose
    • Jaya
    • (as Kaberi Basu)
    Simi Garewal
    Simi Garewal
    • Duli
    • (as Simi)
    Soumitra Chatterjee
    Soumitra Chatterjee
    • Ashim
    • (as Soumitra Chattopadhyay)
    Subhendu Chatterjee
    Subhendu Chatterjee
    • Sanjoy
    • (as Subhendu Chattopadhyay)
    Rabi Ghosh
    Rabi Ghosh
    • Shekhar
    • (as Robi Ghosh)
    Samit Bhanja
    Samit Bhanja
    • Hari
    • (as Shamit Bhanja)
    Pahadi Sanyal
    • Sadashiv Tripathi
    Premashish Sen
      Samar Nag
      Khairatilal Lahori
      Dibyendu Chatterjee
        Aparna Sen
        Aparna Sen
        • Hari's former lover
        • Director
          • Satyajit Ray
        • Writers
          • Sunil Gangopadhyay
          • Satyajit Ray
        • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Commentaires des utilisateurs15

        8,13K
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        Avis en vedette

        8purnenduvianworld

        Life Elusive Captured in Frames!

        Adapted form Sunil Ganguly's story, the film zooms in on the vagaries and vicissitudes of the then bourgeoisie and their disillusionment with their state of affairs. A motley quartet ventures into the woods of Palamau to spend some days in order to extricate themselves from the trammels of their ordered social and city life. Culled from the various strata in the middle class the four characters reflect completely different attitudes bound by a thread of friendship. 'Breaking the rules', they drop anchor at a government forest bungalow without the required permission, consequently browbeating, and finally bribing the chowkidar, putting his job at stake. They remain unshaven, exchange diatribes at a local arrack shop and indulge in a drunken twist causing problem to vehicles. Their behaviour with and indifference (frequently found among the bourgeois people) of the lower orders of the society and their suffering, quite often verging on brutality, may make them, for the time being, unlikeable; but their innocent and ignorant self-esteem doing them in at last draws back our sympathy once again. Ashim (as Soumitra Chatterji) loses his self-confidence finally after the memory game; Sanjoy (as Subhendu Chatterji) finds himself hollow as a man in front of a seductive Jaya; Hari himself mislays his wallet but beats the local boy Lakhai which rebounds on him at last; Shekhar (as Rabi Ghosh) is only the man who escapes much of the humiliation because of his hilarious nature.

        Their unexpected spotting, one morning, of two ladies of their social stratum within the tribal village brings them back, somewhat, to their superficial selves and they try to meet them in person and try their own hands at flirting. Though a forging of relationships is on the way under the hammer-blows of a set of consecutive meetings between the opposite sexes, yet each of the conceited quartet is blown to bits as the women come up trumps. Each of the quartet is chastened in his own way near the end of the film, and the women, winners in the beginning, appear to be pale, gloomy and their voices plangent beneath their jocund exterior and mellifluous chatter and pithy elicitation.

        Like in most of Ray's films, here also, the characters smile, but they find it rather painful to laugh. Though it is a matter of pity that a film of this momentousness received a lukewarm response form the native audience and critics when it was screened, yet it, then, was, and still is, a surefire narration of epic dimensions and the film's aura doesn't seem to dim even though it is watched over and over again. Unfortunately, they, who search for a single and simple theme in a film like this, will not be able to comprehend herein the interplay of various themes. Ray once said regretfully in a Sight & Sound interview, "The film is about so many things, that's the trouble. People want just one theme, which they can hold in their hands." He likened the structure of the film to a fugue, where disparate elements appear, develop interwoven, transformed pitted in a balanced way against each other.

        Lastly, the memory game sequence in the forest is as much psychological as it is appealing. Ray's astute handling of the mise-en-scene surpasses every character study heretofore attempted. Aparna pulls out when only Aparna and Ashim are left in the fray. Sexual undercurrents and each one's mental preferences are reflected during the game. With the forest as the setting the visitors engage in a primitive game of dethroning the other with one's mental might. The mysterious forest exudes revelations of the highest order at once perceivable and profound to be taken into, absorbed and preserved for perennial use by the unfortunate and innocent souls, who often get consumed with the fire of self-esteem and self-satisfaction thereby closing doors to experience and knowledge that's omniscience in it's vastness and immanence.
        7sammy-s-801-770969

        Underrated Ray Classic

        Probably one of the most underrated works of Satyajit Ray....this is a beautiful take on life of few middle urban class people as they go on a vacation.......There's so much depth in every characters and sequences that is handled with so much immense realism......The Memory gane scene alone is enough to make this film into the top tier......
        9tanvir301

        A movie where the urban middle class meets nature.

        As a passionate movie buff, I have the highest regard for Ray's films. That has been reconfirmed after watching this subtly nuanced film from Ray. To the casual viewer, it might seem like the escapades of four middle class gentlemen when they go out of their constrictive surroundings into the wilderness and meet three women. However, a rigorous viewing will expose different layers, some surprising, and others not so surprising. With flawless and fluid direction, Ray tells a story of love lost, confidence regained, inhibitions of a conservative society blown away, overwhelming sadness, and the joy and freedom of coming close to nature. Even though it is quite an old film, it speaks of the human nature and its eternal characteristics so beautifully, that it does not seem dated at all- which is the mark of a classic. Highly recommended.
        10arnolddrong

        Splendid! Splendid!

        Couldn't recall the time, last when I have seen such a natural, inherent term movie! No doubt about that how much gem Satyajit Ray was! Really wish to watch his all movies..
        10uprashanthnayak

        Four urban men go into a jungle retreat to have carnal fun with tribal women but by the end they receive more than just fun.

        Film opens with a shot of paddy fields while a man traveling with his pals in a car ,reads the following " Bengali people are as happy looking at seasons and nature, as they are at looking death in the face". Now I'm not very sure whether this statement is true, but I suspect that this kind of cultured stoicism aptly applies to the director of this movie - Satyajit Ray. Four friends - all young men from Calcutta- go into a forest and plan to stay in a rest house there, while aspiring to have sexual fun with tribal women who are presumed to be liberal in such matters. Of course, this sort of plot is not standard territory for the said director but even with this unlikely template, Ray directs his masterly rays of perspective to illumine the hinterlands and give larger wings to a fledgling premise.

        Though it is not set in the city or even a village, the film is a composite shot of civilization in decline. But in Ray's world, there is always hope, a calm sense of being obliged to emerge from the ruins, and in A.D.R we also see a beautiful example of strong but tranquil feminism.

        This latter aspect emerges in the form of Sharmila Tagore who registers a great performance in this movie. In Ghare Baire, Ray made Victor Banerjee essay a model man, and here he has Sharmila Tagore giving us a portrait of the model woman. Kohl-lined beautifully curving eyes, luxuriant hair coiffed into a bouffant, and a softly contoured figure clothed in sari ,all set off a face that can essay feminine mystique as smoothly as it can show child-like amusement. Aparna (Tagore), it is steadily revealed, is gifted intellectually, bears the weight of the past, nurtures a humane mind and yet sequesters all these facets beneath a regally controlled visage that can hint at displeasure as beautifully as it can sport a smile.

        Technically too, this is an accomplished film with superior camera-work by Soumendu Roy. There is a famous static shot in which the lens stands just outside the car window and looks inside, through the car compartment, and past the other window into the background -4 visual planes hold four different people ,all sporting a range of interesting expressions and emotional dynamics. The other memorable sequence is the Memory Game wherein all the players are seated in a circle, and the lens flicks from one face to another as they play the game.

        Starting with this script, countless other story-tellers might have produced a work of dissipated effect, but Satyajit Ray makes fine use of the novel by Sunil Gangopadhyay to present not just a sylvan jaunt enjoyed by four young men, but also an elegantly presented humanist tapestry. Some directors don't need the Midas touch, they possess something greater.

        For full review and other cinema analysis you may visit http://www.upnworld.com/movie/view/id/6/title/Aranyer+Din+Ratri

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        Histoire

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        Le saviez-vous

        Modifier
        • Anecdotes
          Sharmila Tagore's required dates for the film were clashing with dates of Aradhana (1969) for the shoot of Mere Sapno Ki Rani song.The song was shot with Rajesh Khanna and Sujit Kumar in Darjeeling and her portions were shot in studio.
        • Citations

          Sanjoy: You are now on an ascending curve. The more you live, the higher you'll go.

          Ashim: The higher I'll climb, the lower I'll fall.

        • Connexions
          Followed by Abar Aranye (2003)

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        FAQ

        • How long is Days and Nights in the Forest?
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        Détails

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        • Date de sortie
          • 16 janvier 1970 (India)
        • Pays d’origine
          • India
        • Langue
          • Bengali
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • Days and Nights in the Forest
        • société de production
          • Priya Films
        • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

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        • Durée
          1 heure 55 minutes
        • Couleur
          • Black and White
        • Mixage
          • Mono

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