Satyajit Ray filmography
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Satyajit Ray is mainly known as director of cinemas. However, he was also credited as writer (both as the writer of the story, or , the screenplay), composer and producer in many cinemas, besides other minor credits in a few films. The filmography of Satyajit Ray is listed here.
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[edit] Filmography - as director
- Ghare Baire/ The Home and the World (1984)
- Sukumar Ray (1987)
- Ganashatru (Enemy of the People) (1989)
- Shakha Proshakha (Branches of the Tree) (1990)
- Agantuk (The Stranger) (1991)
[edit] Filmography - as writer
- Chiriyakhana (1967)
- Nayak (1966)
- Kapurush (1965)
- Charulata (1964)
- Mahanagar (1963)
- Abhijan (1962)
- Kanchenjungha (1962)
- Rabindranath Tagore (1961)
- Teen Kanya (1961)
- Devi (1960)
- Apur Sansar (1959)
- Jalsaghar (1958)
- Aparajito (1957)
- Pather Panchali (1955)
- Chinnamul (1950) (uncredited)
[edit] Filmography - as composer
[edit] Filmography - as producer
[edit] Short description
[edit] Pather Panchali
[edit] The next decade
In 1966, Satyajit Ray cast Uttam Kumar, the iconic hero of Bengali film industry in a film of his for the first time. The film was called Nayak or "The Hero", which examines the life of a successful cinema star. Arindam, the star, is on a train to Delhi to pick a national award. Though almost everyone else on the train either lionizes him or hates him, he finds a sypathetic listener in Aditi (Sharmila Tagore), an editor for a women's magazine, and reveals his inner angst to her. The film was shown in Berlin to somewhat lukewarm reception, which saddened Ray.[1] Nayak was followed by Chiriakhana, a whodunit again starring Uttam Kumar. Ray, who directed the film at the request of his assistants who tried to film it but later lost nerve, essentially discounted the film from his ouvre.
In 1969, Ray made what would be commercially the most successful of his films. Based on a children's story written by his grandfather, Goopy Gaine Bagha Byne is a musical fantasy. Goopy the singer and Bagha the drummer meet each other in a forest after being outcast from the villages for terrible performances. Here they meet the King of Ghosts, who, pleased with them allows them three boons. Equipped with the power of magically getting food, shoes that carry them instantly to any place they wish, and most importantly marvelous singing and drumming skills, the duo set out to a fantastic journey in which they finally stop an impending war between two neighboring states, Shundi and Halla. Ray made a sequel to this film in 1980, a somewhat overtly political Hirak Rajar Deshe (where the kingdom of the evil Diamond King or Hirok Raj is an allusion to India during Indira Gandhi's emergency period).[2]
After this fantasy film, Ray made a film that again (like many others) has been called his masterpiece. Featuring a musical structure arguably even more complex than Charulata, Aranyer Din Ratri (Days and Nights in a Forest) was based on a story of the relatively new poet and writer, Sunil Gangopadhyay. It traces four Calcuttan young men going to the forests for a vacation, trying to leave their petty urban existence behind. All but one of them get engaged into revealing encounters with women, which becomes a deep study of the Indian middle class, but done with virtuouso humor and wit. According to Robin Wood, "a single sequence [of the film] ... would offer material for a short essay",[3] but the "memory game sequence" where the four men and two women play a game of memory where they have to name famous people (revealing much about themselves in the process) has been the most acclaimed one.
Often accused, at least in Bengal of ignoring the contemporary realities of the Indian urban experience, Ray finally made his emphatic statement on the topic in 1970's. He completed the so-called Calcutta trilogy: Pratidwandi (The Adversary), Seemabaddha (Company Limited), and Jana Aranya (The Middleman), three films which were conceived separately, but whose thematic connections form a loose trilogy. Though made in that order, the class and age of the protagonist imposes an alternative order on them (which critics often use): Pratidwandi about an idealist young graduate; if dillusioned, still uncorrupted at the end of film, Jana Aranya about how a young man gives in to the culture of corruption to make a living, and Seemabaddha about an already successful man giving up morals for further gains. Of this, the first, Pratidwandi uses an elliptical narrative style previously unseen in Ray films, such as scenes in negative, dream sequences and abrupt flashbacks. The other two have a more simple narrative style. This difference reflects the superior imagination and sensitibility of the protagonist of Pratidwandi, Siddhartha, a character Ray deeply identified with.[4] On the other hand, Jana Aranya is the bleakest, displaying a dark humor hithertho unseen in a Ray film.
In 1973, Ray returned to rural India after more than a decade with his Ashani Sanket (Distant Thunder). Here the filmmaker studies one of the great tragedies of recent Bengali history, the famine in 1943 that caused at least 3 million deaths. It was caused by a combination of ruthless speculation, apathy of the British rulers and disrupted communication due to the second world war. The film continues to confirm Ray's unique artistic perspective, he decides to look at the famine from the viewpoint of the village dwellers affected by it, caught unaware in the vortex of events they have no idea about.[5] The nature is lush, green photographed beautifully, to contrast against the impending danger. Ray cast Babita, a Bangladeshi actress, as Ananga (the main female role), which launched her career as the leading actress of Bangladesh.
In 1977, Ray completed Shatranj Ke Khiladi (The Chess Players), an Urdu movie about chess players of Lucknow. This was Ray's first feature film in a language other than Bengali, something he previously said he would not do. This is also his most expensive and star-studded film, featuring likes of Sanjeev Kumar, Saeed Jaffrey, Amjad Khan, Shabana Azmi, Victor Bannerjee and Richard Attenborough. It was based on a story by Munshi Premchand, an important writer of Hindi literature. The film studies the decadence of the Lucknow gentry and the helpless surrender of its Nawab to the British in 1859. Ray infuses humanism and warmth in to these decadent characters, contrasting that of the acrid sarcasm of Premchand. This is characteristic of Ray, who was "bored by villains". In fact, at some point he thought about giving up the project as he was completely repulsed by the Nawab, but only finally went through it when he found his saving grace (after a long period of research), his love for music and arts.
In 1981, after being denied by the Indian government to make a film on child labor (on the ground that it was illegal in India), Ray reacted by making a Hindi film called Sadgati (Deliverance), dealing with arguably the equally depressing fact of untouchability. Based on a story of Premchand, this is his "cruelest film",[6] and varied very little from the literary work, somewhat uncharateristic of Ray. The film presents, with excruciating detail, the life of Dukhi, an untouchable, and his death while working for the merciless Ghansiram, a Brahmin, who manages to throw his body in an animal dumping ground without ever touching him.
During making Ghare Baire in early eighties, Ray suffered a heart attack that would severely restrict his creative output in the years to come. Nevertheless with the help of his son (who would operate the camera from then on), he completed this film in 1984. He wanted to film this Tagore novel on the dangers of fervent nationalism for a long time, and even wrote a (weak, by his own admission) script for it in the 1940s. In spite of ineveitable rough patches due to his illness, the film did receive some critical acclaim, and it contained the first full-blown kiss in Ray's films.
Ray's last three films, made after his recovery, have a very distinctive style, largely due to the strictures put on him by doctors. Shot mostly indoors, they are much more verbose than his earlier films. Ganashatru, the first of the trio, is based on An Enemy of the People of Henrik Ibsen. Ray transfers the story of the lone doctor to Bengal. Ganashatru is regarded by some as a weak film by Ray standards, and seen as an exercise to get beack into filming after prolonged illness.[7] In Shakha Proshakha, made from an original screenplay, Ray is back to form. In this film of "distressing beauty",[8] three sons come to see their ailing father, who lives with a fourth son, who has mental problems. The father, who has lived a life of utmost honesty, comes to learn the corruption of his sons, and the final scene shows him finding solace only in the companionship of the fourth, uncorrupted but mentally ill son. Agantuk, Ray's last, is another original screenplay, based on a short story he had written earlier.
[edit] Documentaries and short films
In addition to the documentary made on Tagore in 1981, Ray made a number of others. Most of these are on artists he admired. His favorite, and the one to achieve most critical acclaim, was "The Inner Eye", on the blind painter Benode Behari Mukherjee, who was Ray's teacher at Santiniketan. The name of the film would later supply the title to Ray's biography by Andrew Robinson. Ray made a documentary on Bala Saraswati, the virtuouso Bharatnatyam dancer, then in her late fifties. Though it contains a beautiful performance by Bala, her lack to discuss her early life left Ray dissatisfied with the project. In 1987 Ray made a documentary on his father Sukumar Ray. He also made a film of Sikkim before it was annexed by India, but very few copies of the prints exist as the Indian government was adverse to its distribution.
Apart from the hours longs films in Kapurush-Mahapurush and Teen Kanya, Ray also made two shorter films. The first one, Two, is worldless 15 minute film on two boys, one rich and one poor. The rich boy tries to trump the poor boys modest toys by his more expensive ones, with apparent success, but the last passage of the film features the poor boy playing a beautiful flute in the background. The second and longer one, Pikoo, enjoys something of a cult status among its admirers. According to Ray, it was "a poetic statement that cannot be reduced to concrete terms". Based on an earlier short story written by himself, Ray explores a days of a small boy Pikoo and his uncomplicated approach to life while his mother seduces a friend of his father, and his grandfather lies dying.
[edit] Unfilmed
In 1967, Ray wrote a script for a movie to be entitled The Alien, with Columbia Pictures as producer for this planned US/India co-production, and Peter Sellers and Marlon Brando as the leading actors. However Ray was surprised to find that the script he had co-written had already been copyrighted and the fee appropriated. Marlon Brando dropped out of the project and though an attempt was made to bring James Coburn in his place, Ray became disillusioned and returned to Calcutta.[9] Columbia expressed interest in reviving the project several times in the 70s and 80s but nothing came of it. When E.T. was released in 1982, many saw striking similarities in the movie to Ray's earlier script - Ray discussed the collapse of the project in a 1980 Sight & Sound feature, with further details revealed by Ray's biographer Andrew Robinson (in The Inner Eye, 1989). Ray believed that Spielberg's movie "would not have been possible without my script of The Alien being available throughout America in mimeographed copies."[10]
Other films Ray expressed interest to make but never did for various reasons include a short documentary on Ravi Shankar, a film based on Mahabharata, the great Indian epic and E. M. Forster's A Passage to India.
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ Dasgupta 1996, pp. 91
- ^ Robinson 2003, pp. 188-189
- ^ Wood 1972, pp. 13
- ^ Robinson 2003, pp. 208-209
- ^ Robinson 2003, pp. 221-223
- ^ Robinson 2003, pp. 257
- ^ Dasgupta 1996, pp. 134
- ^ Robinson 2003, pp. 353
- ^ Neumann P. Biography for Satyajit Ray. Internet Movie Database Inc. Retrieved on 2006-04-29.
- ^ Newman J. "Satyajit Ray Collection receives Packard grant and lecture endowment", UC Santa Cruz Currents online, 2001-09-17. Retrieved on 2006-04-29.