While writing my earlier post on Rituparno Ghosh, I was amazed to realise
that nearly half of his twenty directorial ventures are right up there among my
favourite films. That puts him second only to Ray in my list. Not even Ritwik Ghatak
had made so many A++ films.
My reminisces continued for the better part of yesterday and today and I
hadn’t bargained for how sad I would feel on hearing about his death. Apart from
the subtle hold he had over me with his films, the unexpectedness of his death
had a lot to do with it.
At forty-nine, a director is usually reaching his peak. As my friend Suhel
Banerjee pointed out, (given his age) Rituparno’s death is a bigger loss to Bengali
cinema than Ray’s. With this in mind, I decided to cling more to the memories
and yield ten of my favourite Rituparno films.
There are no ‘Tagore films’ in this
list. But then, each one of his films is steeped in Tagore – much like how a
Bengali life usually is. We often forget how much The Bearded One is part of
our lives. Rituparno Ghosh’s films are perfect antidotes for that oversight.
Unishey April
My mother and I watched it together and I remember both of us staring at
each other for a few seconds when the last frame dissolved and then breaking
into smiles. Without speaking, we knew this
was the best ending the film could have got and the writer-director wasn’t an
ordinary one. Of course, the film was almost perfect in every other way.
As many commentators noted in
their tributes, Rituparno got the bhadralok Bengali audiences back to the
theatre and Unishey April was a magical start.
Dahan
As I just wrote, this is my favourite Rituparno Ghosh film. It took a
very sensitive topic and gave the most well-balanced take possible. It was set in
1998 Calcutta. It could well be 2013 Delhi. Or 2020 Mumbai. More than the maturity
(and sensitivity) with which he handled the topic, it was the writing which
took my breath away. Having cut my cinema-appreciation teeth on Satyajit Ray, I
remember feeling almost blasphemous when I thought that the writing –
dialogues, screenplay – was almost like Ray’s.
Utsab
Rituparno, I felt, loved uncomfortable situations – at least in his
films. In Ashukh, he created a situation where a daughter had to speculate on
her father’s possible sexual relations. A series of uncomfortable situations
and tense relationships were explored masterfully in Utsab. The old decaying
mansion of the film was – to me – a metaphor for the city of Calcutta and the
talented but squabbling relatives its citizens. When I saw the film, I had
already become a probashi and the helplessness at the imminent downfall of the
family – examined during Durga Pujo – was a gut-wrenching experience.
Titli
Boy loves girl. Boy loses girl. Boy meets girl – again. Boy also meets
girl’s daughter.
For me, Titli was Lamhe meets Kapurush. When you go to see a film that
seems to be a hybrid of two earlier movies you love, you almost pre-decide to
hate the movie. I did exactly the same but came back converted. The music –
especially the title song – warmed my heart. The writing wowed me. And the performances
of the three lead actors just blew me away.
(I think I had just seen Konkona’s debut – Ek Je Achhey Kanya – with considerable
dismay. I became her fan with Titli. And Mithun. How can you not like Mithun
when he plays a movie star?)
Shubho Maharat
Unlike some of his earlier films, I decided to like Shubho Maharat much before
I saw it. Raakhee as a Bangali Miss Marple (with a name as endearing as Ranga
pishima) was brilliant. And the best part of the movie was the smoothness with
which she solved the crime, without ever going anywhere near the scene of crime
and yet making it perfectly plausible.
After this one, I had hoped for a series of Miss Marple films (or at
least a television series) but that never happened.
Raincoat
When Chetan Bhagat and Vinod Chopra were fighting over credits for 3
Idiots, I remembered an interview of Rituparno, where he stated that the credit
to O’Henry’s Gift of the Magi was given at the end of the film only to retain
the suspense but it was against his principle to not credit the original writer
upfront. O’Henry received a Bangali makeover as we got to know that Aishwarya
Rai could actually act and Ajay Devgn’s Zakhm wasn’t a flash in the pan.
Dosar
He went back to an uncomfortable situation – with a vengeance. A wife
learns of his husband’s infidelity after an accident which kills the husband’s
lover and renders the husband critically injured. The wife’s family, the
husband’s colleagues, the lover’s husband and an assortment of bloody real
characters played out the aftermath of the accident. Konkona delivered an
understated but powerhouse performance. Before the movie, I expected her to
chew Prasenjit up and ‘expose’ him. I think it is Rituparno’s directorial baton
that got Prasenjit to match her scene by scene.
The Last Lear
A long time back, I had imagined
Amitabh Bachchan as an actor in the twilight of his career. The
arrogance of having been the emperor once upon a time. The desperation of
seeing it all slip away. The frustration of seeing midgets occupying
centre-stage. The guilt of ignoring his family. The pain of them now ignoring
him. The contempt for his contemporaries compromising to do character roles.
The obsession of trying to get a final hurrah before the curtain falls. And the
quest for a group of people who would be ready to gamble on this old war-horse…
Rituparno delivered this exact story of my dreams to me – with only a
few small modifications. What’s there not to love in it?
Abohomaan
A lot of people saw Satyajit Ray’s life story in this film. I didn’t. I just
felt Dipankar Dey gave the performance of a lifetime in this film as an
eccentric film director who gave up his family for fame and regretted it at the
twilight of his life. Or did he regret it? They forgave him for that. Or did
they? I remember being a little unimpressed with the film while watching it but
ended thinking about the questions it asked for several days afterwards till I
had to pull out the DVD and watch it once again. Rituparno did that sort of
thing to you.
And yes, there are only nine films in the list. I am leaving one space
for Satyanweshi, which will – I am hoping – overtake Ray’s Byomkesh film.
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