Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA man (Abhi Bhattacharya) opposes the love between his sister and the orphan (Satindra Bhattacharya) they adopted years earlier.A man (Abhi Bhattacharya) opposes the love between his sister and the orphan (Satindra Bhattacharya) they adopted years earlier.A man (Abhi Bhattacharya) opposes the love between his sister and the orphan (Satindra Bhattacharya) they adopted years earlier.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Sita
- (as Shri Madhabi Mukhopadhyay)
- Haraprasad
- (as Shri Bijon Bhattacharya)
- Ishwar Chakraborty
- (as Shri Abhi Bhattacharya)
- Little Sita
- (as Shrimati Indrani Chakraborty)
- Abhiram as boy
- (as Shriman Tarun)
- Hari Babu
- (as Shri Abanish Bandyopadhyay)
- Benimadhab
- (as Shri Shyamal Ghoshal)
- Gurudev
- (as Shri Arun Chowdhury)
- Baul singer
- (as Shri Ranen Roychowdhury)
- Akhil Babu
- (as Shri Umanath Bhattacharya)
- Manager
- (as Shri Radhagobinda Ghosh)
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After having seen this extraordinary film, I can't understand why Ghatak's genius was hardly appreciated in his lifetime, why it had to take so long to rediscover him as one of the most amazing film directors of the 20th century.
The beautiful and heart-wrenching story tells about a family of Hindu refugees from East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) who struggle to find a new home in West Bengal. Ishwar Chakravorty gets a job near the river Subarnarekha and goes there with his little sister Shita and Abhiram, a low-caste young boy from the refugee camp he has adopted after the boy's mother had been abducted. They hope to find happiness in this new environment, but when Abhiram comes home after his school years and wants to marry Shita (who is also in love with him), tragic conflicts emerge that shatter the lives of all main characters.
The impressive direction with unorthodox usage of sound and music and expressionistic camera angles, the beautiful photography (notably in Ishwar's "breakdown scene"), and the great performances especially by the amazing Abhi Bhattacharya and Madhabi Mukherjee (though there is also some rather bad acting by some supporting actors, but this is only a minor drawback to the film) all add to the great impression of this wonderful picture. An absolute must-see!
Haraprasad and Ishwar are two moralistic men who attempt to scrape out some semblance of a dignified life for themselves and their dependents in the aftermath of Partition, where the subcontinent was split into two countries (later three), and the crisis that this caused to people who found themselves on the wrong side of borders where different theocratic ideals were playing out. The movie is set in Bengal (Bengal and Punjab were the two provinces that ended up with pieces on either side of the border).
Haraprasad is more of a believer in communal living, whereas Ishwar compromises and becomes a creature of the system. The main issue is that it didn't really matter what you did, leading a dignified and happy life weren't really possible. Human wellbeing is very fragile and our characters here suffer try as they might to readjust to their uprooting.
Director Ghatak tends to follow the stories of the middle classes, perhaps the worse route through life is a downwards one, and many middle class folk simply had their lives destroyed by Partition. The working classes are relatively ignored, although Ghatak is not blind to this: Ishwar can be complacent and there's a scene in a factory where he ignores the important request for leave from an employee, rather absent-mindedly. He had a nickname of "Ocean of thought" at university, the problem here is that as long as we might like to spend time in the idealistic hinterlands of our own minds, this can lead to ignoring others.
Part of Ghatak's charm is that he is self-aware, he knows that long stories of woe are not what people tend to want to watch, and yet he points out that maybe people should be concerned with their conditions, not just trying to momentarily escape them.
The wonderful symbolic cinematography is the best thing about this movie, I would love to see it in the cinema one day. Ghatak is also sensitive to the plight of women and Ishwar tends to have selective hearing towards them or to treat them like children, however well intentioned he may be. Another skill is the ability to evoke with small brushstrokes, The complete injustice of the differential access to politics enjoyed by the rich over the poor, is portrayed in a flash, the character Rambilas casually and callously mentions running for office as he believes the sacred caste system is under threat (the system which keeps him rich and others in grinding poverty and disesteem).
So what exactly is the golden thread? I think the golden thread is hope, the characters live on their hopes, and in admiration of natural beauty. Maybe this is enough. Maybe this is all there is.
This film features post-independent state of Bengal.
This film contradicted many old ideas like 'Nachiketa','Upanishad' and pioneered a new era after partition of Bengal.
The river Subarnarekha and a beautiful home (surrounded by birds,music) on the bank of the river symbolizes the happiness,joy of the homeless people who has come from the East Pakistan.
The director shows here that continuous rioting,communality,partition have killed Bengali classic culture,pride etc.
The background music applied is just awesome by Ustad Bahadur Khan and good singing by Arati Mukherjee.
The application and implication of the Rabindra song "Aj Dhaner Khete" implies the director's great sense.
No doubt it should be taken as one of the best movies ever made in India.
This great work by Ritwik Ghatak should get many awards but got nothing.
I think this was the next master work after 'Meghe Dhaka Tara' by Ritwik Ghatak.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIncluded among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.
- Citations
Haraprasad: [after a trip to a bar] Arise , awake and behold the boons due to you. The way is like a sharp razor's edge, that is what the sages from ancient times tell us. These sages didn't know about the atom bomb.
Ishwar Chakraborty: They didn't, did they?
Haraprasad: No, never. They didn't know war, they didn't know famine, neither did they know riots nor the partition of the country. They just kept chanting their ancient hymns to the Sun.
- ConnexionsFollows Etoile cachée (1960)
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Détails
- Durée2 heures 23 minutes
- Couleur