Movie & Music Director: Satyajit Ray

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Posted: 18 years ago
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Shatranj Ke Khilari (The Chess Players)
1977, India. 113 min., Color, Urdu/Hindi and English (The Indian characters speak in Urdu/Hindi while the British speak in English)
Credits
Producer: Devki Chitra Productions (Suresh Jindal)
Screenplay & Direction: Satyajit Ray, Based on the short story: 'Shatranj Ke Khilari' by Munshi Premchand
Dialogues: Satyajit Ray, Shama Zaidi, Javed Siddiqi
Cinematography: Soumendu Roy
Editing: Dulal Dutta
Art Direction: Bansi Chandragupta & Ashoke Bose
Sound: Narinder Singh, Samir Majumdar
Music: Satyajit Ray
Choreography: Birju Maharaj
Cast
Character: Performer
Mirza Sajjad Ali: Sanjeev Kumar
Khurshid, Mirza's wife: Shabana Azmi
Mir Roshan Ali: Saeed Jaffrey
Nafeesa, Mir's wife: Farida Jalal
Wajid Ali Shah, Nawab (king): Amjad Khan
Ali Naqi Khan, the prime minister: Victor Bannerjee
General Outram: Sir Richard Attenborough
Captain Weston: Tom Alter
Summary
It is 1856, the eve of the first Indian struggle for independence (The Mutiny of 1857). A British firm, "The East India Company" rules much of India; directly or indirectly through 'treaties of friendship.'The kingdom of Avadh is under such a treaty of friendship with the British Company. Its ruler, Nawab Wajid Ali Shah (Amjad Khan), is an indifferent ruler, who prefers arts to the matters of state or politics. He is a poet, composer, singer, dancer and a choreographer. In reality, he is merely a figurehead. The British Company has allowed the landlords to become fairly independent of the state. The Company, in addition to collecting the riches from the state, also takes a share of the taxes collected by the landlords.

The king's able Prime Minister, Ali Naqi Khan (Victor Banerjee), is pained at the situation. But he does not do anything drastic due to his respect and loyalty to the king. Mirza Sajjad Ali (Sanjeev Kumar) and Mir Roshan Ali (Saeed Jaffrey) are two landlords living in the capital city of Lucknow. They too are part of the same culture and live off ancestral wealth and taxes collected from people. They do nothing, and are addicted to the game of chess. They play as per the ancient Indian rules of the game, ignorant of a different kind of chess played by the British; both literally and metaphorically. Mirza's wife, Khurshid (Shabana Azmi), feels neglected. Mirza no longer responds to her feminine charms due to his obsession with chess. Mir's wife, Nafeesa (Farida Jalal) too faces a similar fate. But she has found solace in a wild love affair with a young nephew. On discovering the affair, Mir opts to ignore it rather than confront the situation and disturb his routine of playing chess.

The British are strengthening their grip on the country and are playing a bigger game of chess. Lord Dalhousie, the Governor General, sends General Outram (Sir Richard Attenborough), the British Resident of Lucknow, to take over Avadh under the pretext of Nawab's misrule.

The king, Wajid Ali Shah faces a political checkmate. He has only two options, either to give up his throne or to fight a battle. He has neither the will nor the means to fight the British, for he has a tiny and ill equipped army. The state has felt no need to maintain an army as the Avadh is under a 'treaty of friendship' with the British Company.

Mir and Mirza learn about the British Company's troops marching towards Lucknow. Scared that they may be called to fight the British forces, they run off to a remote village to continue playing chess.

Fearing blood shedding of his people in a hopelessly unequal battle, the king opts to hand over the kingdom to the British with out a fight, singing to himself a Thumari that he has composed -


(Roughly translated: As we leave our beloved city of Lucknow, see what we have to go through...)

For Mir and Mirza, the chess continues even as the British troops march into the city until they have a fight over the game. Mir, who has nearly shot Mirza and is ashamed of his behavior, says, "We cannot even cope with our wives, so how can we cope with the company's army?" .
Comments
Shatranj Ke Khilari was Ray's most expensive film boasting of stars from western and Hindi cinema of Bombay. It was reported to have cost about two million rupees in comparison of his earlier films that were made under half a million rupees. This, however, was still a shoestring budget when compared with the average budgets of the contemporary Hindi films of Bombay, ranging from 4 to 10 million rupees. It is also his one of the two non-Bengali films; other being Sadgati (Deliverance) also based on a short story by Munshi Premchand.

While Munshi Premchand's story focuses on the two chess players Mirza and Mir, Ray expanded the story by elaborating the characters of Wajid Ali Shah and General Outram and adding a few more characters. Ray was attracted to the story by the parallel that Munshi Premchand draws between chess games of Mir and Mirza, and the crafty moves by the British to capture the king.

The film has no heroes or villains. Like in most of his films, he sympathizes with better attributes of both the British and the King, Wajid Ali Shah. General Outram is troubled with the illegal means he must follow to take over Avadh despite a treaty of friendship with the kingdom. But he feels bound by his duty to the British Empire. The King, Wajid Ali Shah, is shown as an accomplished poet, musician and choreographer with no interest in political matters. He has relied on the treaty of friendship with the British to pursue the arts in stead of maintaining an army.

It is interesting to note that the film was made during the darkest period of modern Indian democracy when the Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi declared "Emergency" from 1975 to 1977, and suppressed the fundamental rights for her political survival. This was made possible by her crafty moves and initial noninvolvement by people; like Mir and Mirza in the film.

All the lead players, Sanjeev Kumar (Mirza Sajjad Ali), Saeed Jaffrey (Mir Roshan Ali), Amjad Khan (Wajid Ali Shah, Nawab), Victor Banerjee (Ali Naqi Khan, the Prime Minister) and Sir Richard Attenborough (General Outram) give their finest performances.

The non Bengali audience also gets to appreciate Ray's dialogue writing skills in a few scene that are in English, though the Urdu dialogues that were written by collaborators do not rise to the same standards. A scene that takes place between General Outram (Sir Richard Attenborough) and Captain Weston (Tom Alter) prompted V. S. Naipaul to comment, "It's like a Shakespeare scene. Only three hundred words (actually over 500 words) are spoken but goodness! - terrific things happen." Here is an excerpt from 'The chess players : and other screenplays'


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manjujain thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
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arre wah qwest da, ekdam badhiya director. thanks!!!
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Posted: 18 years ago
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Qwest da, they have a site http://www.satyajitray.org/
where they have all the inofrmation about him.
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Posted: 18 years ago
#4

Satyajit Ray
b. May 2, 1921, Calcutta, India.
d. April 23, 1992, Calcutta, India.

by Helen Goritsas

Helen Goritsas is a Sydney-based film enthusiast - a regular cinemagoer, writer, film student and filmmaker.

Satyajit Ray was born in Calcutta into an exceptionally talented family who were prominent in Bengali arts and letters. His father died when he was an infant and his mother and her younger brother's family brought him up. After graduating from Presidency College, Calcutta, in 1940, he studied art at Rabindranath Tagore's University in Shantiniketan, West Bengal. He took up commercial advertising and he also designed covers and illustrated books brought out by Signet Press. One of these books was an edition of Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhya's novel, Pather Panchali, which was to become his first film. In 1947 Ray established the Calcutta Film Society. During a six month trip to Europe in 1950, he managed to see 100 films, including Vittorio De Sica's Ladri di Biciclette (1948), which greatly inspired him. He returned convinced that it was possible to make realist cinema and with an amateur crew he endeavoured to prove this to the world.

In 1955, after incredible financial hardship (shooting on the film stopped for over a year) his adaptation of Pather Panchali (Song of the Little Road) was completed. Prior to the 1956 Cannes Festival, Indian Cinema was relatively unknown in the West, just as Japanese cinema had been prior to Kurosawa's Rashomon (1950). However, with Pather Panchali, Satyajit Ray suddenly assumed great importance. The film went on to win numerous awards abroad including Best Human Document at Cannes. Pather Panchali's success launched an extraordinary international film career for Ray.

A prolific filmmaker, during his lifetime Ray directed 36 films, comprising of features, documentaries and short stories. These include the renowned Apu trilogy (Pather Panchali, Aparajito [1956] and Apur Sansar [1959]), Jalsaghar (1958), Postmaster (1961), Charulata (1964), Days and Nights in the Forest (1969) and Pikoo (1980) along with a host of his lesser known works which themselves stand up as fine examples of story telling. His films encompass a diversity of moods, techniques, and genres: comedy, satire, fantasy and tragedy. Usually he made films in a realist mode, but he also experimented with surrealism and fantasy.

Pather Panchali

Pather Panchali was based on the aforementioned famous novel of the '30s depicting a poor Bengali family's grim struggle for survival. In this story, a father, although talented artistically, is compelled to eke out a living for his wife and two children by collecting rents. For a long time he struggles to bring up the family in its ancestral home, but ultimately he is forced to abandon the home. Aparajito (The Unvanquished) forms the second part of this great trilogy. It deals with the adolescence of Apu following his father's death. Sarbojaya, after some hardships, takes Apu to live in her uncle's household in the country. The local schoolmaster nurtures Apu's interest in learning and in the wider world, and at 16 Apu wins a scholarship to study in Calcutta. Caught up in the excitement of the city, he visits his mother reluctantly and rarely. She is lonely and dying but refuses to appeal to his sympathy for fear of impeding his education. Finally a letter from his uncle brings Apu home, one day too late. After the funeral, Apu, refusing to follow his father into the priesthood, leaves again for the city.

Apu Sansar

Before concluding the trilogy Ray made Paras Pather (The Philosopher's Stone, 1958), a satirical comedy about a poor clerk who chances on a magic stone that turns all metal to gold. The concluding film in the trilogy is Apu Sansar (The World of Apu), in many ways the most mature and deeply felt of the three works. Apu, now a grown man, marries, writes his first novel, and then loses his wife Aparna in childbirth. Shattered, Apu refuses to his son, blaming him for Aparna's death and he wanders off in anguished solitude. Five years later his friend Pulu unearths him and at last he is reunited with his son. This event gives him the vitality and joy with which to face the future. The theme of change, of the countervailing gains and losses attendant on the forces of progress, has often been identified as the central preoccupation of Ray's work. This theme, underlying much of the Apu trilogy, finds its most overt expression in Jalsaghar (The Music Room), an underrated film and one of Ray's finest achievements. Jalsaghar is the story of Biswambhar, a feudal lord who ruins himself through holding music concerts to outclass the boorish upstart son of a moneylender. The film as a whole explores the idea that truly great art is created in that space of time just before disintegration takes over. Time seems to be frozen for Biswambhar and it is within this act of refusal that his ruin lies.

The inner struggle between traditional and modern values in Indian life has coloured several other Ray films. Devi (The Goddess, 1960) is essentially a story exploring the dangers of religious fanaticism and superstition. Daya is a young bride at the end of the 19th century who (because her father-in-law has a vision) suddenly believes that she is the reincarnation of the goddess Kali. The gullible Daya accepts the worship of the people around her, but she eventually becomes a victim of a quarrel that develops between her husband and her father.

To mark the centenary of the birth of Rabindranath Tagore, Ray made Teen Kanya (Three Daughters) in 1961. The Postmaster is the first of the three-part series making up Teen Kanya. A young man from Calcutta, exiled as postmaster in a remote village begins teaching a young orphan girl (who tends his house) to read and write. Acting out of sheer boredom, he is too selfish to notice her growing attachment to him, and when the chance of a transfer comes he leaves without consideration. The second episode, Samapti, is a comedy about a young law student who rejects the dull bride chosen by his mother and marries the village tomboy. The third episode is Monihara, a ghost story about a wife who returns after her death to claim her husband's last gift.

Charulata

Ray's first original script was for Kanchanjungha (1962), which was also his first picture in colour and the first film for which Ray composed the score. Filmed entirely on location in Darjeeling, it traces the varied activities of a vacationing family dominated by the father, a rich Calcutta businessman. Yet another disillusioned character is the taxi-driver protagonist of Abhijan (The Expedition, 1962). In Mahanagar (The Big City, 1963), Ray tackles the problem of whether or not both a husband and wife should take up jobs to maintain the family. The Big City is set in contemporary India, but the issue at stake - that being a woman's place in society - is essentially the same in Charulata (1964), which takes place in 1879 and is based on another story by Tagore. Admirers of Ray's work have often quarrelled as to which are his best films. Most have agreed however that Charulata is among the very finest. Ray himself rates it as his favourite. "It's the one with the fewest flaws." (John Wakeman, 1988, p. 845.)

After the confident mastery of Charulata, Ray seemed for the rest of the decade to lose his sureness of touch, unable to come satisfactorily to terms either with his material or with the world around him. Films such as Kapurush-o-Mahapurush (The Crowd and the Holy Man, 1965), Nayak (The Hero, 1966) and Chiriakhana (The Zoo, 1967) contain little of Ray's personal touch. It was not until Aranyer Din Ratri (Days and Nights in the Forest, 1969) that Ray returned to form. In this accomplished work, Ray isolates and removes a group of modern young Calcuttans from their natural habitat in order to study their attitudes and reactions and to reveal aspects of their respective characters. During the late-'60s, Ray made a fairytale for adults in Goopy Gyn Bagha Byne (The Adventures of Goopy and Bagha, 1968) and then went on to make The City Trilogy (comprising of Pratidwandi [The Adversary, 1970], Seemabaddha [Company Limited, 1971] and Jana Aranya [The Middleman, 1975]) but before its completion a number of other film projects intervened. Two documentaries from this period are Sikkim (1971), a travelogue on the northern border kingdom, and The Inner Eye (1972), a short tribute to the blind artist Binod Behari Mukherjee. Between these two documentaries, however, Ray made Ashani Sanket (Distant Thunder, 1973), his second colour film.

Shatranji Ke Kilhari

In 1961 Ray had revived Sandesh, the children's magazine founded by his grandfather and continued by his father until his premature death. From this time, alongside his movie-making he also produced a constant flow of illustrations, verses, translations and stories for the magazine. Several of his stories featured Felu Mittar, a private detective and it is one of these that he adapted for his second children's film Sonar Kella (The Fortress, 1974). Like all of Ray's children's films it was hugely successful. Wary of making films in a language in which he was not proficient, Ray resisted the idea of moving outside the restricted Bengali. However, he was persuaded to aim for a wider audience by making his first film in Hindu, Shatranji Ke Kilhari (The Chess Players, 1977), a period piece set in Lucknow 1856. In this film Ray traces two parallel stories. While General Outram, the British resident, moves to oust Wajid Ali Shah from the throne of Oudh and annex the Kingdom for the East India Company, two of Wajid's indolent nawabs, indifferent to history, play endless games of chess. Although a strong film, it would seem Ray failed to adequately mesh the two separate strands of the plot as he intended. After The Chess Players, Ray returned to making films for children. Ray adapted another of his short stories for Joi Baba Felunath (The Elephant God, 1978). The plot revolves around a stolen gold statuette, which Felu eventually recovers in the face of bribes from assorted heavies. Ray followed this film with Hirok Rajar Deshe (The Kingdom of Diamonds, 1980), a sequel to Goopy and Bagha in which the two characters find themselves in a police state where idealists are exiled and dissenters are brainwashed.

In 1981, as a result of a successful revival of Ray's work in Paris, ORTF commissioned a new work, Pikoo, a 27-minute fiction film. Pikoo is a story which depicts a family crisis through the uncomprehending eyes of the six-year-old son. The same year, Ray was commissioned to make a film for Indian TV. The resulting film was Sadgati (Deliverance) a 50-minute piece filmed in Hindi, which relates a story of callous exploitation. In 1984 Ray made Ghare-Baire (The Home and the World), telling the story of a love triangle in which the characters are forced to confront the wider effects of their own limitations.

Due to his medical condition (which resulted from a heart attack during the making of The Home and the World), Satyajit Ray was told by his doctors not to do any location work and he was forced to shoot in studios. Unfortunately, this constraint of shooting does mar the last of his films as a whole. This is true of not only Ganashatru (Enemy of the People, 1989) but also Shakha Prashakha (Branches of the Tree, 1990) and Agantuk (The Stranger, 1991).

* * * *

There is perhaps no filmmaker who exercised such total control over his work as Satyajit Ray. He was responsible for scripting, casting, directing, scoring, operating the camera, working closely on art direction and editing, even designing his own credit titles and publicity material. His films come as close to complete personal expression as may be possible in cinema. Ray's style grows out of the material itself, and from an inner compulsion to express it clearly. The thread that ties the body of his work together is its strong humanist basis. By his own admission his films are the antithesis of conventional Hollywood films, both in style and content. His characters are generally of average ability and talents. Perverted or bizarre behaviour, violence and explicit sex, rarely appear in his films. His interest lies in characters with roots in their society. What fascinates him is the struggle and corruption of the conscience-stricken person. He brought real concerns of real people to the screen. His works serve to remind us of the wholeness and sanctity of the individual. Above all, Ray's is a cinema of thought and feeling, in which the feeling is deliberately restrained because it is so intense. Although Ray continued to experiment with subject matter and style more than most directors, he always held true to his original conviction that the finest cinema uses strong, simple themes containing hundreds of little, apparently irrelevant details, which only help to intensify the illusion of actuality better. These themes cannot come from the passing fashions of the period; they must be drawn from permanent values.

Aparajito

By depicting physical environments with the utmost truth and by exploring human relationships to their limits, Ray reveals many aspects of the human condition. Through particulars, he reaches universality, conveying through his cinema this co-existence. Much of his cinema's strength lies in the total impression of its average moments, moments that can't be picked out as necessarily striking scenes. This is because he strikes a carefully judged balance between form and content. He does not let one part override the other. He was known to reject locations because he thought them too spectacular and overpowering, stating they would upset the balance.

In the last few decades we have seen greater emphasis on form and technique in film at the expense of content. Form has come to be identified as the content of film. With formalism reigning supreme, subject matter has disappeared. Meaning has been divorced from the subject and a steady dehumanisation in cinema has resulted. What is refreshing about Satyajit Ray and his films is that they represent sanity and faith in humanity. With him, the subject comes first and with the material on hand he allows it to dictate the form.

Throughout his career, Satyajit Ray maintained that the best technique of filmmaking was the one that was not noticeable, that technique was merely a means to an end. He disliked the idea of a film that drew attention to its style rather than the contents. That is why his work touches one as a revelation of artistry. For at the same time, he reveals his attitude, his sympathies, and his overall outlook in a subtle manner, through hints and via undertones. There are no direct messages in his films. But their meanings are clear, thanks to structural coherence.

Agantuk

Ray makes us re-evaluate the commonplace. He has the remarkable capacity of transforming the utterly mundane into the excitement of an adventure. There is the ability to recognise the mythic in the ordinary, such as in the train sequence of Pather Panchali where the humming telegraph poles hold Durga and Apu in a spell. In addition, he has the extraordinary capacity of evoking the unsaid. When viewing one of his films we often think we know what one of his characters is thinking and feeling, without a single word of dialogue. This ability to create a sense of intimate connection between people of vastly different cultures is Ray's greatest achievement. More then any of his contemporaries in world cinema, he can create an awareness of the ordinary man, and he doesn't do it in the abstract, but by using the simplest, most common and concrete details such as a gesture or a glance.

What is also distinctive in Ray's work is that the rhythm in his films seems almost meditative. There is a contemplative quality in the magnificent flow of images and sounds that evokes an attitude of acceptance and detachment, which is profoundly Indian. His compassionate work arises from a philosophical tradition that brings detachment and freedom from fear, celebrates joy in birth and life and accepts death with grace. This perspective attempts to create the whole out of a fineness of detail. Ray succeeded in making Indian cinema, for the first time in its history, something to be taken seriously, and in so doing, created a body of work of distinct range and richness.

Helen Goritsas, May 2002
Satyajit Ray

Filmography

Pather Panchali (Song of the Little Road) (1955) 115min B/W

Aparajito (The Unvanquished) (1956) 113 min B/W

Parash Pathar (The Philosopher's Stone) (1957) 111 min B/W

Jalsaghar (The Music Room) (1958) 100 min B/W

Apur Sansar (The World of Apu) (1959) 106 min B/W

Devi (The Goddess) (1960), 93 min B/W

Rabindranath Tagore (Documentary, 1961) 54 min B/W

Teen Kanya (Three Daughters) (1961) (comprising of Postmaster [56 min], Samapti [56 min] and Monihara [61mins], all B/W). (There also exist different versions of this film, combining only two of the three stories, under the title Two Daughters.)

Kanchenjungha (1962) 102 min Colour

Abhijan (The Expedition) (1962) 150min B/W

Mahanagar (The Big City) (1963) 131 min B/W

Charulata (The Lonely Wife) (1964) 117 min B/W

Two (1964) 15 min B/W

Kapurush-O-Mahapurush (The Crowd and the Holy Man) (1965) (Two-part film - The Crowd and The Holy Man, running at 74 min and 65 min respectively, B/W)

Nayak (The Hero) (1966) 120 min B/W

Chiriakhana (The Zoo) (1967) 125 min B/W

Goopy Gyn Bagha Byne (Adventures of Goopy and Bagha) (1968) 132 min B/W & Colour

Aranyer Din Ratri (Days and Nights in the Forest) (1969) 115 min B/W

Pratidwandi (The Adversary) (1970) 110 min B/W

Sikkim (Documentary, 1971) 60 min B/W

Seemabaddha (Company Limited) (1971) 112 min B/W

The Inner Eye (Documentary, 1972) 20 min Colour

Asani Sanket (Distant Thunder) (1973) 101 min Colour

Sonar Kella (The Fortress) (1974) 120 min Colour

Jana Aranya (The Middleman) (1975) 131 min B/W

Bala (Documentary, 1976) 33 min Colour

Shatrani Ke Khilari (The Chess Players) (1977) 113 min Colour

Joi Baba Felunath (The Elephant God) (1978) 112 min Colour

Pikoo (Pikoo's Day) (Short, 1980) 26 min Colour

Hirak Rajar Deshe (Kingdom of Diamonds) (1980) 118 min Colour

Sadgati (The Deliverance) (1981) 52 min Colour

Ghare Baire (Home and the World) (1984) 140 min Colour

Sukumar Ray (Documentary, 1987) 30 min Colour

Ganashatru (Enemy of the People) (1989) 100 min Colour

Shakha Proshakha (Branches of the Tree) (1990) 121 min Colour

Agantuk (The Stranger) (1991) 120 min colour

Select Bibliography

Cowie, Peter, 50 Major Filmmakers, New York, Tanity Press, 1975.

Das Gupta, Chidananda, Film India Satyajit Ray, Bombay, Tata Press, 1981.

Nyce, Ben, Satyajit Ray: A Study of his Films, New York, Greenwood Press 1988

Robinson, Andrew, Satyajit Ray, The Inner Eye, Great Britain, WBC Ltd Bristol & Maesteg, 1989.

Seton, Marie, Portrait of a Director: Satyajit Ray, London, St Ann's, Press 1971.

Montage No 5/6 July 1966, Anandam Film Society Publication, Bombay.

World Film Directors, Volume 11 1945-1958, Wilson Company, 1988.

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Jalsaghar (The Music Room)


1958, India. 100 min, B/W, In Bengali with subtitles.
Credits
Producer: Satyajit Ray Productions
Screenplay & Direction: Satyajit Ray; Based on the short story: 'Jalsaghar' by Tarasankar Banerjee.
Cinematography: Subrata Mitra
Editing: Dulal Dutta
Art Direction: Bansi Chandragupta
Sound: Durgadas Mitra
Music: Vilayat Khan
Music & Dance performances: Begum Akhtar, Roshan Kumari, Waheed Khan, Bismillah Khan (on screen); Dakhshinamohan Thakur, Ashish Kumar, Robin Mazumdar and Imrat Khan (off screen)
US Distributor:
Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment

Cast
Character: Performer
Biswambhar Roy: Chhabi Biswas
Mahamaya, Roy's wife: Padma Devi
Khoka, Roy's son: Pinaki Sen Gupta
Mahim Ganguly, neighbor: Gangapada Bose
Manager of Roy's estate: Tulsi Lahari
Ananta, Roy's servant: Kali Sarkar
Ustad Ujir Khan, Singer: Ustad Waheed Khan
Krishna Bai, the dancer: Roshan Kumari
Singer: Begum Akhtar

Summary
InIn Ray's own words the film deals with "a music loving Zamindar (landlord) who refuses to change with the times and thereby meets his comeuppance."

1930's, Bengal. Biswambhar Roy (Chhabi Biswas) is the last in a long line of rich patriarchs. He continues to cling to his refined tastes even as his estate is diminishing. All that remains is his two loyal servants, a horse, an elephant, and the crumbling palace. On the terrace of his palace, smoking a hookah, Roy asks his old servant what month it is. He is unsettled by the festive music being played at his neighbor's place. The occasion is the Upanayan (initiation or coming of age ceremony) of the neighbor's son.

He recalls his own son's initiation ceremony. We are transported back in time when Roy was in his best times of but slowly loosing his power and wealth. A great concert takes place in Roy's imposing music room. All the guests are served drinks as they enjoy a performance by a great female classical singer. Later that night, Roy tells his wife that he is willing to spend his last coin to hear such music.

The next concert takes place on a stormy night. His wife and son have gone to her mother's place, but are expected to return in time to join him for this musical soiree to celebrate the new year and also to spite his neighbor Ganguly. Roy looks out at the river as he is worried about his wife and son's return by a boat on such a stormy night. A model boat falls down due to the wind. As the concert progresses, he notices an insect trapped in his glass. Worried, Roy runs out to see if his wife and son have returned. His worst fears are confirmed as the news arrives that they have drowned in the river.

Roy falls into a depression. His inability to adapt with changing times has made him into a recluse. He has closed the music room for good.

The sound of music from the neighbor's house and a wish to demonstrate his fine taste in music to his flashy neighbor leads him to organize one last concert. The music room is opened once again. He uses all his resources to organize the concert. He relishes the music as he celebrates his victory over his neighbor and toasts his ancestors.

After all the guests have left, a drunk Roy remembers the past glory. He proudly introduces portraits of his ancestors to his servant. He notices a big spider on his own portrait. As the candles go out one by one, Roy is convinced that he too must depart with the extinguishing of the last candle. His servant assures that it is almost dawn now so he need not worry about the candles.

In a grand gesture, he mounts his horse and rides at a terrible pace to be violently thrown off. Roy dies as two servants look on tearfully.
Comments
Chhabi Biswas gives a superb performance as the crumbling feudal landlord. Subrata Mitra's cinematography and music by Ustad Vilayat Khan all contribute immensely to create the atmosphere. The camera movements reinforce the character and highlight film's maze-like construction and Roy being trapped in his past. Interestingly, Ray began work on the screenplay with an idea of making a more 'commercial' film with song-n-dance sequences. It was after the box-office failure of his Aparajito, lying in bed due to a broken leg that he felt obliged to make a film within a formula that the Bengali audiences were used to. However, as he worked on the script, it "refused to take a popular shape but ended up as a serious story of decaying feudalism, embellished with music..."

In the three music concerts that Roy organises, the classical performances, come to the foreground. To the uninitiated in the Indian classical music, this aspect of the film may be a big distraction. It you don't like the performances, these scenes may appear to be too drawn out as they did to some of the critics when the film was first released.

The film has some of the best Hindustani classical singers and musicians. (India has two systems of classical music: Hindustani, which evolved in the north, and Carnatic that is practiced in the south. Both follow a common raga system; though, a particular raga may have different names in the two systems. While Hindustani tradition loosely defines a framework and structure leaving the performer to improvise; the Carnatic tradition follows more rigidly defined 'compositions'.)

Listening to the Indian classical music requires concentration and patience as the 'raga' unfolds; likewise for Jalsaghar. Don't attempt to watch it if you are dead tired after a hard day's work.

It was this film that led to the French to pay attention to Ray and his films. Initially the film drew mixed responses from the critics abroad.

It is tempting to draw parallels with his later film Shantranj Ke Khilari (The Chess Players, 1977), Roy in Jalsaghar (The Music Room, 1958), and Wajid Ali Shah in Shatranj Ke Khilari, both, share an obsessive and doomed love for music that leads to their destruction. However, Wajid Ali Shah is himself is himself an accomplished artiste while Roy's taste in music may have been due to his upbringing alone. Also, in Shatranj Ke Khilari, the British and the indifferent landlords too have a major role in the king's down fall.
What others say...
A great, flawed, maddening film -- hard to take but probably impossible to forget. It's often crude and it's poorly constructed, but it's a great experience. Worrying over its faults is like worrying over whether King Lear is well constructed; it doesn't really matter.
- Pauline Kael

Like all great filmmakers, Ray belonged to the world as much as to his own nation. But The Music Room leaves no doubt where his heart lay. It was with his own people, warts and all. - Derek Malcolm, The Guardian UK: Derek Malcolm's Century of Films


Awards
President's Silver Medal, New Delhi, 1959
Silver Medal for Music, Moscow, 1959

Edited by Qwest - 18 years ago
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Posted: 18 years ago
#6
Jalsaghar (The Music Room)
A Film Review by James Berardinelli
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India, 1958
Running Length: 1:40
MPAA Classification: No MPAA Rating (Mature themes)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Cast: Chhabi Biswas, Padma Devi, Pinaki Sen Gupta, Gangapada Bose
Director: Satyajit Ray
Producer: Satyajit Ray
Screenplay: Satyajit Ray based on the novel by Tarashankar Banerjee
Cinematography: Subrata Mitra
Music: Vilayat Khan
U.S. Distributor: Sony Pictures Classics/Merchant-Ivory
In Bengali with subtitles

In Jalsaghar, director Satyajit Ray examines the age-old conflict between the landed nobility and the unpedigreed rich, between those who dwell in the past and those who embrace the future. Using the same meticulous, unforced style employed in his celebrated Apu Trilogy, Ray explores how one man's need for a pampered, sumptuous lifestyle leads inexorably towards his complete ruin. It's a fascinating snapshot of Indian culture in the 1930s, and a cautionary tale about the dangers of an inflated opinion of self-worth.

Ray filmed Jalsaghar between the second (Aparajito) and third (Apur Sansar) chapters of the Apu Trilogy. After spending two films (Pather Panchali, Aparajito) providing an intimate perspective of the struggles of a poverty-stricken family, Ray moved to the other end of the social spectrum, to those who lived in palaces, commanded legions of servants, and threw lavish parties. Tragedy, of course, has no respect for class, and losses are suffered by both Apu and the lead character of Jalsaghar, Huzar Biswambhar Roy (Chhabi Biswas). Their reactions to these crushing circumstances are predictably different -- the resilient Apu fights on; the pampered Huzar gives up.

When Jalsaghar opens, Huzar is an old, beaten man. Life no longer holds any joy for him. He sits on the roof of his palatial estate, smoking and staring into space. He doesn't know the month or the season, and doesn't express much interest when he's told what they are. He is surrounded by faithful retainers, but seems unconcerned when they inform him that his "funds are low and expenses are heavy."

The first half of the film shows, via flashback, the circumstances that brought Huzar to his present condition. As a much younger man, he was a libertine, enjoying life to its fullest. To indulge his passion for music, he had a jalsaghar, or music room, constructed within his palace where he could hold large parties and enjoy the singing, playing, and dancing of paid performers. The music room is a large chamber, with gorgeous, crystal chandeliers, a giant mirror at one end, and pictures of Huzar's ancestors decorating the walls.

Heedless of the alarming rate at which his debts piled up, Huzar seized any excuse to throw a party, especially if it could inconvenience and show up his wealthy but poorly-bred neighbor, Mahim Ganguly (Gangapada Bose). As an indirect result of one of these parties, Huzar's wife (Padma Devi) and son (Pinaki Sen Gupta) were killed in a boating accident. Grief-stricken, he ordered the music room closed, and retreated into the sullen, disconsolate world where we find him at the film's opening.

The central struggle is between Huzar, who represents the "old order", and Mahim, who stands for the new. Huzar is a noble, a product of blood and breeding, who is given respect because of who he is and who his ancestors were. His grand palace is like a museum, and he is stuck in the past. He has no money and still uses candles and lanterns. Mahim, on the other hand, is a commoner, but, as a result of his extremely lucrative profession (moneylending), he has become rich. He aspires to usurp Huzar's position of esteem in the district by building his own music room and luring people to his house with the promise of electric lights and memorable entertainment.

In the Apu Trilogy, Ray drew us into the protagonist's world, encouraging us to empathize with Apu through his triumphs and tragedies. In Jalsaghar, the director's approach is different. He distances the audience from the characters, allowing us to observe the culture and events from a detached perspective. As a result, while this movie lacks the sublime beauty and simple power of the Apu films, it is no less intellectually involving. That's not to say that Jalsaghar has no emotional impact, but the intent is different. Although we do not share Huzar's despair, we pity him, acknowledging that he has brought this ruin upon himself.

Seen in concert with the Apu Trilogy, Jalsaghar makes for a fascinating study of similarities and contrasts, and helps us see another level of Ray's cinematic mastery. This is a very visual film -- there are numerous ingenious shots (including one where a spider crawls up the leg of a painted figure) and a stirring dance sequence. While I don't think this movie reaches the pinnacle achieved by Aparajito and Apur Sansar, it is nevertheless an intriguing and, at times, beguiling motion picture that deserves its place among the director's masterworks.
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Posted: 18 years ago
#7

The Music Room is a film led to greatness by Satyajit Ray's devotion to a single mood: elegiac. Ray isn't alone in sculpting this great piece. The acting by Chabi Biswas as the crumbling aristocrat Huzur Biswambhar Roy, cinematography by Subrata Mitra and music direction by Ustad Vilayat Khan all contribute immensely. Set in the 1930's with the emerging nouveau riche, Roy is the last in a long of rich patriarchs, stumbling as his estate diminishes but clinging till the end to his refined means. Roy lives in a mansion in the middle of a desert, a symbol of his isolation from encroaching destitute. Roy is frequently filmed alone, as are other subjects (his dog, horse, elephant). The film begins with the elderly Huzur sitting alone, staring blankly in his back garden overlooking a once proud space. He is served by one of his two humble and loyal servants. The story flashes back some 15-20 years to a more glorious time when the younger Huzur, with his young son Khoka and wife Padma (the realist/pragmatist to Huzur's idealism) was the class of his region, hosting luxurious concerts in his home. Huzur's centerpiece, his ivory tower and final refuge from the external reality/realism is the titular music room. The room reflects Huzur, his pride, his heirloom, his inner soul. Ray draws us in spatially, in concentric circles, from the outer oasis, to the backyard pool/yard, to the mansion, to the music room and further yet, the music room's stage. Likewise Mitra's camera often, and nearly always in relation to Roy, dollies inwards toward Roy. The movement not only serves to honor the character and make us feel more empathy toward him, but counterpoints the film's maze-like construction.

Many of the film's best moments take place in the music room. For example, the first concert during the flashback, in which the camera encircles Roy surrounded by his guests and cuts into the long takes only to underscore Roy's sense of tranquillity and contentment; the concert which is interrupted by the tragic news of his son and wife's drowning; and the final concert, Roy's swan song which leads to his psychological break from reality into momentary insanity (he imagines the candles in the room extinguishing themselves one by one). In each of the concerts the music varies. In the first we have more of an ensemble piece; in the second the singer dominates with his emotive voicing; and a phenomenal dancer highlights the third. The final concert occurs years after Roy, saddened by the double deaths of his wife and son and his failing estate, has closed the music room and remained living on the mansion's second floor. With all his gold, silver, and jewellery gone all that remains is a little money. He uses it to stage one final concert. Roy's continued carelessness toward his economic state can be read in several ways. If we read it critically, it becomes a sign of his selfishness and disregard for his families well-being. In another sense his gesture can be seen as an act of defiance against the upstart moneylender who is out to show Roy up, and a romantic tribute to the "class of class." A third meaning, psychological, can see the acts as a reflection of how deeply ingrained the caste system and colonialism are in India.

When the drunken Roy explains to his servant why he is different from Tulsi, the estate manager, he speaks in English and refers to his "blood," and then points to the three portraits of his ancestral forefathers (father, grandfather, great grandfather) that hang around the music room's huge mirror. Ray's genius is in balancing these three readings so that our emotional relation to the character is complex and in a sense more critical and involved. The film ends with the drunken-maddened Roy, against the wishes of his servants (servile to the end), riding his horse for one last jaunt through the desert. The final moments are reminiscent of Kenji Mizoguchi, especially Sansho the Bailiff (camera movement that moves away from the center action; set in an arid zone). Roy is thrown violently off his horse. The servants run to their fatally hurt, bleeding master. With the earlier death of his son and now himself, his rich, aristocratic lineage has come to an end. In this touching moment Ray has the camera track away (left) from the body to stop at his fallen headgear. This image dissolves to the final shot: that of the darkened chandelier swinging aimlessly in the darkened music room.


Ajantrik (1958)

The other pillar of Indian cinema greatness is Ray's (lesser known) contemporary, Ritwik Ghatak. In the same year as Ray's majestic The Music Room , Ghatak made his first feature film, Ajantrik , also a film about obsession (to be more precise, not the first film he made, which would be Nagarik , but his first film to be released). The film begins with two comic-relief men looking for a taxi to drive them to a nearby village. A boy leads them to an obstreperous taxi driver with a battered, ancient Chevrolet. Roughed up and haggard, the two men finally arrive at their destination. At this point Ghatak shifts the film's emphasis from the two men to the cab driver, and we slowly learn of the cab driver's (Bimal) obsessive relationship with his car. Kali Bammerjee's performance as Bimal is excellent, displaying subtle nuances of a character slowly losing touch with reality. At first Ghatak treats Bimal's obsession humorously. Bimal treats his car as a living thing, giving it a name (Jagaddal), pampering it, and defending it against insults (as one may protect a lover). Ghatak underscores the humor in this relationship formally, with for example human gurgling sounds as Bimal feeds the radiator, and moments of fantasy (the car's headlights move about as if they were eyes).


Ritwik Ghatak

The film's tone and style shift approximately halfway into the film, with humour and playfulness giving way to an eerie subjectivity (less dialogue, a more pronounced emphasis on the landscape, heightened use of ambient music and sound effects). A key moment in signaling this shift occurs during an extended solo drive when Ghatak cleverly manipulates the conventional use of point of view cutting. A disturbed Bimal is driving along mountainous roads. Ghatak cuts from third person shots of Bimal in medium close- up at the wheel and point of view shots where we see the hood of the car and the road. However, in one of the supposed point of view shots we are shocked when we see his car enter the frame from a bend in the road! The shot is equivalent to those trick point of view shots found in the films of Carl Dreyer or Michelangelo Antonioni where a shot clearly begins as a character's subjective point of view but then as the camera continues to pan or dolly it picks up the character in the frame, shifting the point of view to third person. The simple effect creates a jarring sense of disorientation that places us poetically into Bimal's crumbling psyche.

In reference to Bimal, Ritwik Ghatak has said: "You can call my protagonist, Bimal, a lunatic, a child, or a tribal. At one level they are all the same. They react to lifeless things almost passionately. This is an ancient, archetypal reaction....The tribal songs and dances in Ajantrik describe the whole cycle of life - birth, hunting, marriage, death, ancestor worship, and rebirth. This is the main theme of Ajantrik , this law of life.." Throughout the film characters treat Bimal's obsession with ridicule, scorn or puzzlement. Their actions and dialogue often raise the question of why Bimal is not able to sever his irrational association with this crumpling, decrepit vehicle. Even after the car finally gives in to its age, Bimal, an otherwise miser, spends a huge amount of money on new car parts to render life (only temporarily) back to Jagaddal. One could offer a metaphorical reading of this "fear of separation." Ghatak was born in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh and the then center of cultural activity in East Bengal. The Independence of India in 1947 led to the partition of Bengal (West/East Bengali), which left collective emotional and psychological scars on many Bengali families. Ghatak, who greatly lamented the division of Bengal, has dealt with this pain of separation overtly in many of his later films. Perhaps, subconsciously, it was already present in Ajantrik ? In either case, as a study in obsessive behavior or a metaphorical enactment of political partition, Ajantrik is a remarkable first feature.


Edited by Qwest - 18 years ago
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Posted: 18 years ago
#8
🤗 Babu thanx. yu hav strted my fav directors thread. will add here for sure. will also add the musical tracks (background musics) frm his films tht he himself made.



Edited by Barnali - 18 years ago
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Posted: 18 years ago
#9
This is an article i had wth me for a long time nw. it deals wth the music of satyajit ray films. The article is vry long so i am posting it in parts.
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Music of Satyajit ray



In the beginning of his career Ray worked with some of greatest music maestros of Indian classical music; Pandit Ravi Shankar for the Apu Trilogy and Parash Pathar (The Philosopher's Stone, 1958, Ustad Vilayat Khan for Jalsaghar (The Music Room, 1958) and Ali Akbar Khan for Devi (The Goddess, 1960).Since Teen Kanya (1961), he began composing the music for his films. "The reason why I do not work with professional composers any more is that I get too many musical ideas of my own, and composers, understandably enough, resent being guided too much", he said.

He would start working on music in very early stages of a production - sometimes as early as in the script stage. He would keep notes of the music ideas as they evolved. After completing the final edit, he would usually shut himself in his study for several days to compose the music. He meticulously wrote the scores in either Indian or western notation depending on musicians.

"... the pleasure of finding out that the music sounds as you had imagined it would, more that compensates for the hard work that goes into it. The final pleasure, of course, is in finding out that it not only sounds right but is also right for the scene for which it was meant". he wrote.

To him the role of music was to make things simpler for the audience. "If I were the only audience, I wouldn't be using music! ... I have always felt that music is really an extraneous element, that one should be able to do without it, express oneself without it", he said.

He experimented with mixing western and Indian elements in his scores. He composed a background music that belonged a particular film rather than to any recognisable tradition. In Ghare-Baire (Home and the World, 1984), he adapted western music elements along

Edited by Barnali - 18 years ago
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Posted: 18 years ago
#10

Western Influences on Satyajit Ray

The contributions of Satyajit Ray to the Bengali and to Indian cinema in general has not been matched by any other filmmakers, both past and present. The Apu Trilogy itself would be enough to place him on the pedestal of filmmaking and there would be no doubt about the genius of Ray's talent in the film world after the Trilogy. Ray's niche in the hall of fame of international cinema is firmly secure. The number of awards apart, Ray now shares the dizzying heights where only a handful of film makers sit. As Lindsay Anderson, the British filmmaker and critic once said: "I would compare Satyajit Ray to Eisenstein, Chaplin, Kurosawa, Bergman and Antonioni. He is among the greatest in world cinema." In 1978, the Berlin Film Festival committee adjudged him one of the three all-time masters of the cinema, a rare honour he shared with Chaplin and Bergman, the same year Oxford University conferred on him an honorary doctorate. Many critics called him the complete filmmaker who wrote his own scripts, composed the film scores, made sketches for the costumes and sets and even designed the posters of his films.

Ray grew up in Calcutta, which in 18th/19th c. was the seat of the British Empire in India. The merger of the East and the West gave birth to the Bengali Renaissance and to the educated middle-class of which Ray and his family was an integral part. This fusion of the East and the West is deeply embedded in Ray's art-- the same kind of fusion one can find in Rabindranath Tagore's humanistic fusion of classical Indian tradition and Western liberal thoughts. Tagore himself was the principal architect and guiding spirit of the Bengali Renaissance and at one time Ray was a pupil of Tagore's art school at Shantiniketan. This kind of upbringing and education imbued Ray with traditional Bengali/Indian culture along with significant aspects of Western art and culture. Ray knew his cultures very well. David Ansen (Newsweek, 1981), the film critic of the Newsweek once wrote that few film artists could equal "the Renaissance man" for sheer cultural depth, which Ray possessed innately. How, when and where did he pick up such influences which eventually impacted on his art and craft, is an intriguing and an interesting question.

One major factor appears to be that Ray had learnt his art mainly from the Western cinema. The directors he repeatedly referred to, while talking about filmmaking, were Jean Renoir, Vittorio De Sica, John Ford and Frank Capra to name a few. He had also expressed admiration for directors as diverse as Bergman and Hitchcock. Ray met the French director Jean Renoir who was filming The River in Calcutta and it was Lindsay Anderson who asked Ray to write about Renoir for a Cine magazine called the Sequence, which Ray did by interviewing Renoir.

Earlier in his younger days, his two passions were films and music, in fact music preceded films in terms of his interest. He had grown up in an atmosphere of Bengali songs and Brahmo hymns where he participated in the family choir. But Ray hankered for something more dramatic than the vedic chants and Tagore songs, which he found in the symphonic music of the West. As he himself said: "At the age when Bengali youth almost inevitably writes poetry, I was listening to European classical music." (Sumit Mitra, 1983; p.73)

At the age of thirteen, Ray went looking for bargains in music shops of Calcutta with one of his school friends, and one of the treasures he found was Beethoven's 5th Symphony, and then he stumbled upon Mozart's Eine Kleine Nacht Musik. According to his friend, after the great discovery he lay awake the whole night. The logic, symmetry and the beauty of Mozart's music was not lost on Satyajit Ray. Ray once said : "As a small boy I had read about Beethoven in the Book of Knowledge, now I was listening enraptured to his sonatas and symphonies." Later in his professional life he learnt to play the piano which he played with "professional ease". His expertise in Western classical music was well recognized. Adi Gazdar, the Calcutta- based classical pianist once confirmed, that Ray was "one of the best connoisseurs of Western classical music in the country."

Edited by Barnali - 18 years ago
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