For the last several years I have been waiting for the restored version of the Apu Trilogy and when it released (theatrically in the US), I waited
patiently for at least the DVDs to come to India. When that did not happen, I went to Amazon USA, bought the set and
had it shipped to India – easily the most expensive individual piece of cinema I
have bought.
I expected to not like it as much as my earlier viewings because
I was now a cynical, jaded, middle-aged man – immune to (and far away from) the
Bengali fandom of the legendary director. My reaction to Pather Panchali –
which I watched today – was one of stunned silence, broken by the occasional
tear.
Pather Panchali – to borrow a phrase that came nearly six decades
after it – was EPIC. I cannot recommend it enough.
From my earlier viewings of Pather Panchali, my most abiding
memories were some of the striking scenes – the train scene, the sweet seller
scene, Indir Thakurun’s death, Durga’s death and so on. I expected to be wowed
by those visuals once again and more so, because this was on a restored print. But
while the visuals were more vivid than anything I had seen before, what struck
me this time was the purity of the emotions, realness of the relationships and
the consistency of characterisations. And I say this not only in the context of
this film but the entire Trilogy.
Sarbajaya and Harihar form such a real couple, with
contrasting character traits – one hardened by the travails of a life of
poverty, the other retaining an intellectual, idealistic and somewhat unreal
view of life. Their uneasy partnership in negotiating life, celebrating little
joys, looking forward to a better tomorrow while mired in penury did not touch
me all that much when I watched it last (probably twenty years back) but as a
married man today, it just broke my heart.
The ups and downs of their married life, the ebb and flow of
their relationship is from a film made in 1956 and a book written in the 1930s…
and yet, it is so real that I could recognize them in scenes that I see with married
couples today. If this is not a triumph of characterization, I don’t know what
is.
Durga and Apu form a very real pair of siblings, the kind of
relationship that is again heartbreakingly real and only possible when the
elder sibling is a girl. Apu’s devotion to his sister and Durga’s protective arm
around her brother form some of the most beautiful scenes in the film. Again,
the relationship stood out this time – even more than the beauty of the scenes
they did together. Their chasing of the sweet-seller after having to say no to
his wares establishes both the joys and sorrows of their lives succinctly and
evocatively.
For me, the defining scene of Pather Panchali is the one where
Apu gets ready for school after Durga’s death and walks down the village path alone
– especially when contrasted with the earlier scene of Apu and Durga together.
One thing that struck
me while watching the film today was that Durga had no photographs and Apu’s
memory of his sister would have got obscured with time. Or maybe not. Maybe the
memories grew vivid as his imagination would have taken over the fading
memories.
I could go on and on about Pather Panchali and I will
probably come back to it later. For the time being, I will end with two
characters that stood out more this time than the earlier times.
Chunibala Devi (playing Indir Thakurun) turns in a remarkable
performance, given that it comes from a person who was more than eighty years
of age when she did the film. Her emotions, her voice, her physical gestures
are so perfect that it is difficult to accept her scenes as anything other a
documentary. In this restored version, you could even see her parched leathery
skin and her tattered saree – one a testament to the director’s casting skills
and the other to the crew’s attention to detail.
Tulsi Chakraborty (as the grocer-schoolmaster) stood out in
his short screentime – his bulging eyes providing a canvas of expressiveness and his mannerisms
bringing the character alive. This role was, of course, the precursor to an
even more fantastic role he did in Paraspathar a couple of years later.
The DVD has some excellent supplementary material, all
unseen and delightful.
A Long Time on the
Little Road is an audio track of Satyajit Ray reading out his account of
the making of the film (the text version of which appeared in Sight and Sound
magazine). The beauty of the account is matched perfectly by the mellifluous
quality of his voice.
An interview of Soumitra Chatterjee has him talking about
the impact Pather Panchali – both book and film – had on the Bengali psyche and
he is his usual articulate, Ray-fanboy self!
The most delightful part – for me – was an interview of
Shampa Srivastava, who played the young Durga in the film (and was credited as
Runki Banerjee) and is Karuna Banerjee’s daughter. She had some beautiful recollections
of the shooting and listening to her recounting them in an American accent
(while pronouncing the Bengali names correctly) was just amazing. [I never ever
imagined I would find an actor of Pather Panchali on LinkedIn but I did! Here.]
Two short interviews of Ravi Shankar (who composed the
music) and Soumyendu Roy (who was a camera assistant on Pather Panchali and
became Ray’s cinematographer later on) brought out interesting angles to the
making of this classic.
Many students of filmmaking have said that they have learnt
from Ray’s films. I am not sure how much they gleaned from Pather Panchali
because it seems – to me – not a craftsman’s output that one can learn from but
the production of a genius working at the peak of his powers.
I am neither a film expert nor a student of filmmaking. I can
only confess to being completely blown away by the film. I don’t think I have
learnt anything from Pather Panchali. I just know I am a better human being for
having seen it.
Comments
tragedies to strike. But Apu Durga running through the kash bon is an image all bengalis carry in their hearts ☺ Just a little thing,the name of the actor playing the teacher was Tulsi Chakrabarty.
tragedies to strike. But Apu Durga running through the kash bon is an image all bengalis carry in their hearts ☺ Just a little thing,the name of the actor playing the teacher was Tulsi Chakrabarty.