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Le salon de musique

Original title: Jalsaghar
  • 1958
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Le salon de musique (1958)
Three Reasons Criterion trailer
Play trailer1:42
1 Video
26 Photos
DramaMusic

Depicts the end days of a decadent zamindar (landlord) in Bengal, and his efforts to uphold his family prestige even when faced with economic adversity.Depicts the end days of a decadent zamindar (landlord) in Bengal, and his efforts to uphold his family prestige even when faced with economic adversity.Depicts the end days of a decadent zamindar (landlord) in Bengal, and his efforts to uphold his family prestige even when faced with economic adversity.

  • Director
    • Satyajit Ray
  • Writers
    • Tarashankar Banerjee
    • Satyajit Ray
    • Santi P. Choudhury
  • Stars
    • Chhabi Biswas
    • Gangapada Basu
    • Padmadevi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Satyajit Ray
    • Writers
      • Tarashankar Banerjee
      • Satyajit Ray
      • Santi P. Choudhury
    • Stars
      • Chhabi Biswas
      • Gangapada Basu
      • Padmadevi
    • 43User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Music Room
    Trailer 1:42
    The Music Room

    Photos26

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    Top cast13

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    Chhabi Biswas
    Chhabi Biswas
    • Huzur Biswambhar Roy
    Gangapada Basu
    • Mahim Ganguly
    Padmadevi
    • Mahamaya, Roy's wife
    • (as Padma Devi)
    Kali Sarkar
    • Roy's Servant
    Tulsi Lahiri
    • Manager of Roy's Estate
    Pinaki Sengupta
    Pinaki Sengupta
    • Khoka, Roy's Son
    Sardar Akhtar
    • Singer
    • (as Begum Akhtar)
    Roshan Kumari
    Roshan Kumari
    • Krishna Bai, dancer
    Waheed Khan
    • Ustad Ujir Khan
    • (as Ostad Wahed Khan)
    Bismillah Khan
    • Musician
    Salamat Ali Khan
    • Khyal singer
    Tarapada Nandy
    Pratap Mukherjee
      • Director
        • Satyajit Ray
      • Writers
        • Tarashankar Banerjee
        • Satyajit Ray
        • Santi P. Choudhury
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews43

      7.87K
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      Featured reviews

      7gbill-74877

      Adored the musical performances

      Beautifully shot and with a great soundtrack, but a rather dreary story, which is a critique of idle members of the traditional zamindar (aristocrat) class, a celebration of traditional Indian music, and a depiction of the end of an era. In the film, a damn fool of a middle-aged man (Chhabi Biswas) squanders his family fortune as the portraits of four generations of his ancestors look on in his music room, where he hosts large groups of friends to lavish performances despite his dwindling funds. He likes lolling about, smoking a hookah and drinking cognac, and it's clear he likes the music as well, but what he likes even more is the prestige and status that he has, and lording it over one of his neighbors he views (and treats) as inferior.

      I loved seeing and hearing the various musical instruments, the wonderful vocalizations, and the performances - especially that dancer towards the end - they were something special. The rest of it had meaning, but was less compelling for me, despite all the craft and attention to detail director Satyajit Ray put in. It would have been more interesting had we had gotten more depth and insight into some of the other characters. Certainly worth watching though.
      icivoripmav

      best music film ever !

      Just to appreciate Roshan Kumari's legendary performance -one of the most mesmerizing dancing sequences ever filmed, this masterpiece deserves a repeated viewing.

      There is something savage, auto-destructive but also the purest in form about the landlord's passion for music and childish vanity in front of his peers, which made me ponder over the place of music in our society long after the credits end. In the age of MTV and MP3, we are used to the idea of carrying routinely our favorite songs everywhere from streets to bathroom, and it's pity that we hardly experience anymore the authentic ambiance of intimate music gathering such as miraculously acted and filmed in Jalsaghar. Music in other era and other place must have been high point and extra-ordinary moment of community life, source of the spiritual inspiration for civil life as well as its destruction. The decor and lighting of the music room is sumptuous and otherworldly, in perfect contrast with the wearisome monotony of domestic scenes the declining aristocrat is forced to endure.
      8Bob Pr.

      A subtle look at ageing + the pre-Independence Indian caste system

      This was seen in the monthly Foreign Film Series in a society for retired university (KU) peeps. This 1958 story is remarkably subtle, about the advancing age and declining wealth of a higher caste Indian man, a Zamindar (landlord), whose income from his inherited lands is dropping from the previous levels of his wealthy ancestors because increasing river floods have lessened his rentable property and income. He's unable to adjust his manner of living to either that change or simultaneous changes in the Indian economy that lead to new economic benefits and social mobility for many in lower castes. He's especially irritated at his nouveau riche lower caste new next door neighbor whose income comes from money lending rather than through inherited property and wealth; he engages in expensive rival concerts which he cannot truly afford and these leave him even poorer. Through two extended flashbacks we learn he had been married and had a son (16? 18?); both wife and son died together on a trip. So he's alone for many years. While Indian music is his primary comfort (played in "the music room" of his palatial home), he also begins to use it as his primary club against his "upstart" neighbor. As he ages we see his memory decline, e.g., asking one of his two remaining servants, "What month is this?" before he presents one last concert for invited guests (and to belittle his rival, his lower caste neighbor, an included guest) before he then embarks on an activity which leads to his death. Great examples of Indian music (but the closed captions on the DVD we saw had white type/lettering which sometimes was not very legible against its background). The movie also very subtly raises the question -- to what extent is this person (one's self or relative or friend) going through parallel sequences in the getting old process?
      9santonus-993-519229

      Superb restoration by Criterion Collection

      When I first saw the Music Room in a big screen at the Ice-skating Ring Calcutta, I found it to be slow but intriguing. Since then whenever I watched this film, I felt I rediscovered it once again. When I found that the Criterion Collection has released the DVD version, I didn't think twice to buy it from Amazon though the price is more than sum total of all the Satyajit DVD/VCDs I have ever purchased. With a superb digital restoration, it is an audio-visual pleasure to watch the khayal recital in the backdrop of the looming disaster, the Kathak performance, tinkling sound of the chandelier, the night scene and so on. Analysis of the film by the French television channel and by Andrew Robinson is a delightful bonus. What a love and perfection that have gone in to restore this masterpiece from oblivion in this heritage apathetic country!
      mazumdar

      A study of the nature of privilege in society -- PLOT DISCUSSED

      WARNING -- PLOT DISCUSSED -- The jalsaghar is a great music hall in the mansion of the main character, a scion of a great landowning family. It's almost all he has left of the Ray family's legacy. Over the years his land has been slowly eaten away by one of the great rivers of Bengal. But he still has the trappings of aristocracy -- his retainers address him as "Hujur" ("my lord"); even his wealthy neighbour, Ganguli, addresses him as "Thakurda" ("(paternal) grandfather"). He lives only for his jalsaghar, where he can recreate his family's past glory and where he can still win a game of one-upmanship against Ganguli. Meanwhile, Ganguli is up-and-coming. He's a businessman, the new aristocrat, land-poor but cash-rich. He gets electric lights for his house; he gets a motor car, the first in the region. Satyajit Ray, the legendary director, masterfully contrasts the hollowness of the old aristocrat with the shallowness of the new aristocrat. How is privilege earned? Who is due respect? What is worthy of pride? What will pride get you? These are the questions that are explored with subtlety. The focus of the film is the performance of Chhabi Biswas, a legend of the Calcutta stage. (An interesting aside -- "chhabi" is Bengali for "picture" and "biswas" means "belief.") He fit the mold of a classic actor -- temperamental, undependable, a raging alcoholic, a master. Almost every scene is wholly dependent on him, as he preens and boasts and rages and pines away for lost glory. When you read that Biswas was in real life completely tone-deaf, his creation of a music-lover is an astonishing accomplishment, both by him and by Satyajit Ray.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The film is included on Roger Ebert's "Great Movies" list.
      • Goofs
        After talking to his wife about the cost of the music party, a close-up shows the landlord falling asleep with his hand bent down at the wrist. After the cut to medium, his hand lies straight up in his neck.
      • Quotes

        Huzur Biswambhar Roy: [laughing drunkenly, deriding the moneylender's son, Ganguly] He failed. He failed!

        Huzur Biswambhar Roy: [now talking to his servant Ananta, who is refilling his glass with liquor] He couldn't do it. He couldn't do it! That moneylender's son! He wanted to be king of the mountain. What arrogance, huh? What arrogance! A dwarf reaching for the moon! He couldn't do it. You know why he failed?

        Huzur Biswambhar Roy: [speaking directly to Ananta] Blood! The blood in my veins! You know whose blood flows in my veins? You want to see? Come...

        Huzur Biswambhar Roy: [proceeding to point out portraits on the wall of his elders] My father... my grandfather... my great grandfather... my great-great grandfather.

      • Connections
        Featured in Celluloid Man (2012)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • February 18, 1981 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • India
      • Official site
        • Watch on KLiKK
      • Languages
        • Bengali
        • English
      • Also known as
        • The Music Room
      • Filming locations
        • Nimtita Rajbari, Nimtita, West Bengal, India(The House)
      • Production company
        • Aurora Film Corporation
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Gross worldwide
        • $3,247
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 40 minutes
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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