The film critic
in India is marginalized within the world
of journalists in general and critics in
particular. The investigative journalist,
the political commentator, the environmental
reporter and the rural explorer lead the
hierarchy of journalists with their ‘hard-core’
writing. Chidananda Dasgupta has changed
the scenario forever. Film criticism is
now as ‘hard-core’ as mainstream
journalism, though it does not command the
space and the platform in the print media
the way it used to when Dasgupta was a practising
critic. Rather, it is Film Studies that
is now a much-in-demand discipline in several
universities in India. In this sense, Dasgupta
is a pioneer in the movement towards serious
writing on cinema, stressing time and again,
through his writings, that the distinction
between art house cinema and mainstream
cinema is a myth. He made history with the
Lifetime Achievement Award bestowed on him
for Best Writing at the Sixth Osian’s
Cinefan Festival of Asian Cinema in July
2004. This is the first ever Lifetime Achievement
Award to have been conferred on a film critic
and scholar. “I am getting this award
at a time when film criticism is almost
dying out in India. We spent our lives teaching
people the value and worth of cinema. When
we first asked for government help to form
the first film society, the official at
the ministry said, 'Film society, what's
that?’ 'Thankfully, lots of things
have changed since then," he said in
his response to the award.
To label Dasgupta only as ‘film critic’
however, is unfair because he pioneered
the film society movement along with like-minded
friends Satyajit
Ray and Harisadhan Dasgupta in 1947.
“A comment from Cyril Connelly, editor
of Horizon, who said: ‘Calcutta
is a city which has no film society’
set off the trigger, more because Bombay
had already laid the foundation for two
film societies, one in 1937 and another
in 1942. Neither of these evolved into a
movement. Nor did they bring about changes
in Indian cinema. We decided to change all
this. With 50 members at a membership fee
of Rs.5.00 per month and Prasanta Mahalanobis
as our first President, the membership looked
like a veritable Who’s Who of the
Calcutta intelligentsia.” Dasgupta
suggested the forming of a Film Federation
and along-with six others. “We met
Krishna Kripalani in 1959 and in 1960, the
Federation began to function,” reminisces
Dasgupta.
Surprisingly, Chidu-da hardly saw films
till he was 21. His interest, till then,
was focussed on literature, not in cinema.
“Manik (Satyajit Ray) egged me on
to see good films and would sometimes take
me to see a film for the second time. I
was personal assistant to Prasanta Mahalanobis,
the economics scholar, at the Indian Statistical
Institute and taught English literature
in the evenings at City College. The turning
point came in 1946 when I attacked an essay
penned by noted author Buddhadev Bose in
Parichay. The impressed editors,
Hiren Mukherjee and Niren Roy, asked me
to write for them. In 1947, Satyajit Ray,
Harisadhan Dasgupta, fresh from the UCLA,
and I, founded the Calcutta Film Society,”
recalls Dasgupta.
Born in Shillong in 1921, Chidu-da had
staunchly Brahmo parents who were dead against
cinema of any kind. Ironically, their son
evolved into one of the few cinema scholars
and critics – if not the only one
– to have placed Indian cinema on
the international map – in terms of
research, analysis, interpretation and criticism.
While in college, Dasgupta was externed
from Patna for his involvement in the 1942
movement. He came to Kolkata to do his post-graduation.
An early marriage in 1944 his parents were
opposed to (though Supriya his wife, is
also from a Brahmo family), forced him to
take a lecturer’s job at St. Columba’s
College in Hazaribagh at a salary of Rs.100.00.
At the time, it was not really a modest
sum. Much later, his long span with ITC
– beginning in 1955 - as their Public
Relations chief did not interfere with his
objectivity as a critic who writes with
equal fluidity in Bengali and in English.
In
what way is his approach to cinema different
and distinct from the rest that makes him
an institution unto himself? In his response
to this question, this flossy-white-haired
scholar says, “I approach cinema holistically
and like to place milestone films and filmmakers
against their socio-historical and political
perspective. Having had the chance to travel
around the world, watching films and interacting
with filmmakers internationally, my books
on cinema are rather broad-based though
I tend to zero in on Indian cinema. I have
edited books on cinema and culture too and
write an occasional column on culture for
a woman’s fortnightly called Sananda,
edited by my daughter Aparna
Sen. Among my books are - Talking
About Films (1981), The
Cinema of Satyajit Ray (1980)
and The Painted Face – Studies
in India’s Popular Cinema (1991).
All of them have run into several editions.
I have also written prolifically for international
publications. I won the Best Film Critic
award at the National Award many years ago.
I wrote the musical score for my daughter’
film Sati. One of my papers is
entitled The Black Hole of Indian Film
Criticism. The paper points out what
I feel are wanting among Indian film critics.”
He is currently working a book tentatively
titled Unpopular Cinema.
When asked about how her interest in serious
cinema was born, daughter Aparna Sen says,
“When Renoir arrived in India to make
River, I was a baby. In his younger
days, my father strove untiringly to gain
a respectable hold for the film society
movement. He also made two delightful films
himself, Bilet Pherat(1972) and
Amodini. He has remained singularly
devoted to the cause of ‘legitimate’
cinema. As a little girl, I knew and heard
people who were to become famous filmmakers
in years to come. To know Bunuel and Bazin,
I did not have to come out of my house.
My father and his friends discussed them
at home. We were taken to screenings held
by the Society. At times, there would be
screenings in our own home. This evolved
within me an eye for good cinema. Till this
day, unless the visuals please me, I don’t
like the film. I never rely only on the
story. We were not allowed to see
populist Bengali films like Sagarika
(1956), Harano
Sur (1957) etc. Suchitra
Sen -Uttam
Kumar starrers were a big no-no. It
is an irony that later, I became a leading
star in these very populist films I was
not allowed to watch. Pather
Panchali was the very first Bengali
film I saw.”
“While researching for a book on
Mrinal Sen,
the Public Service Broadcasting System offered
me a proposal to make a few biographical
documentaries on some filmmakers, I jumped
at the chance. That is how this film came
about. I should have thought of this earlier,
but strangely, it escaped me. I should have
made a similar documentary on Satyajit Ray
while there was still time. I did not. I
honestly believe that Mrinal Sen’s
contribution to Indian cinema has not been
properly recognized or honoured. Praises,
awards, international acclaim have been
showered on Satyajit Ray and Ritwik
Ghatak, effectively marginalizing Mrinal’s
contribution. I consider this unfair and
wish this film would shed light on his rich
and unforgettable contribution to cinema
per se,” elaborates Dasgupta.
International film festivals he has not
been to, as invited delegate or jury member,
could perhaps be ticked off the fingers
of one hand. He has written and edited some
of the best books on Indian cinema. He also
received a fellowship to make a documentary
on Prince Dwarakanath Tagore, grandfather
of Rabindranath Tagore.
He is lucid in his comments on the present
trend in film criticism. “Film critics
today lack a consistent ideological positioning.
Some of them lack aesthetic sensibility.
Some mistake aesthetics for sensibility.
They spend much lesser time on reading and
research than needed. This often reflects
on their writing. There are also critics
writing books on Indian cinema. Sociological
scholars now write papers and books on cinema
which is a happy thing.” This came
across when sometime back, he was persuaded
to speak at a panel discussion at a book
release function at the British Council,
Calcutta. The book was Shyam Benegal
by Sangeeta Dutta. He fascinated the select
audience with his amazing command over the
socio-political-backdrop against which Shyam
Benegal made the transition from the
synthetic and technically sophisticated
world of ad films to feature films with
Ankur (1973),
tracing Benegal’s evolution over time,
till Zubeidaa
(2001).
His reminiscences of his old friend Satyajit
Ray are filled with deep reverence. “Ray
was a multi-faceted personality but sadly,
most of his greatness as filmmaker outside
West Bengal, his home state, has been based
mainly on hearsay. He has been rightly described
as a renaissance man. In his films, he composed
or controlled all aspects of this normally
collaborative medium so completely as to
become an auteur (author) years
before the French developed the concept
and made the word fashionable. If he had
not made films and had simply written for
children, he would still have become famous.
Ray represented a set of high moral values
and a large world view, at once deeply Indian
an universal, that has sustained the best
of Indian tradition through a series of
great men of Indian renaissance of the 19th
and 20th centuries, of whom he was the last.”
His hair today is like cotton candy –
flossy and white. So is his lately cultivated
goatee. His smile is sweet and his voice,
soft. It could be deceptive for some because
he is an acutely sharp-witted man who defies
age with intellect. Till recently, one could
catch him between his trips across the globe
to adjudicate at international film festivals.
His painfully arthritic limbs would fail
to keep his spirits down, and he would pack
up for yet another trip to Uncle Sam country,
where his eldest son-in-law Kalyan, teaches
literature at the Morris College. But then,
the mind would always focus back home in
the relative peace and quiet of the Dasguptas’
Alipur Park Road apartment in Calcutta.
The Dasguptas have shifted base from their
lovely Santiniketan bungalow to the city
to stay closer to Aparna Sen for whom, looking
after her parents, like films, is one more
passion she holds close to her heart.
Shoma A Chatterji is a freelance
journalist who specialises in cinema and
gender. She has won the National Award for
Best Writing on Cinema twice.
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