It is one of
life's greatest ironies that Ritwik Ghatak
who is today something of a cult figure
in Bengal was so little understood and appreciated
during his lifetime. Today his films have
won much critical acclaim but the fact remains
that in their time they ran to mainly empty
houses in Bengal. Ghatak's films project
a unique sensibility. They are often brilliant,
but almost always flawed.
Ghatak was born in Dhaka now in Bangladesh.
The partition of Bengal, the division of
a culture was something that haunted Ghatak
forever. Ghatak joined the left-wing Indian
People's Theatre Association (IPTA) where
he worked for a few years as a playwright,
actor and director. When IPTA split into
factions, Ghatak turned to filmmaking.
By and large Ghatak's films revolve around
two central themes: the experience of being
uprooted from the idyllic rural milieu of
East Bengal and the cultural trauma of the
partition of 1947.
Ghatak's first film was Nagrik (1952)
about a young man's search for a job and
the erosion of his optimism and idealism
as his family sinks into abject poverty
and his love affair too turns sour. Ghatak
then accepted a job with Filmistan Studio
in Bombay but his 'different' ideas did
not go down well there. He did however write
the scripts of Musafir (1957) and
Madhumati (1958)
for Hrishikesh Mukherjee
and Bimal
Roy respectively, the latter becoming
an all time evergreen hit.
Ghatak returned to Calcutta and made Ajantrik
(1958) about a taxi driver in a small
town in Bihar and his vehicle an old Chevrolet
jalopy. An assortment of passengers gives
the film a wider frame of reference and
provided situations of drama, humour and
irony.
But perhaps his best work was Meghe Dhaka Tara
(1960),the first film in a trilogy examining
the socio-economic implications of partition.
The
protagonist Neeta (played by Supriya
Choudhury) is the breadwinner in a refugee
family of five. Everyone exploits her and
the strain proves too much. She succumbs
to tuberculosis. In an unforgettable moment,
as the dying Neeta cries out "I want to
live…", the camera pans across the
mountains accentuating the indifference
and eternity of nature even as the echo
reverberates over the shot.
Ghatak followed it up with Komal Gandhar
(1961) concerning two rival touring
theatre companies in Bengal and Subarnarekha (1965).
The last is a strangely disturbing film
using melodrama and coincidence as a form
rather than mechanical reality.
Ghatak also had a brief stint as Vice-Principal
of the Film And Television Institute of
India (Pune), a time he recalled as a happy
experience. However his next film Titash
Ekti Nadir Naam (1973) done for a young
Bangladesh producer was not.
The film on the life and eventual disintegration
of a fishing community on the Titash, was
completed after many problems at the shooting
stage including his collapse due to tuberculosis
and was a commercial failure.
Ghatak made one more film before his death
Jukti Takko Aar Gappo (1974) the
most autobiographical and allegorical of
his films. He himself played the main role
of Nilkanta an alcoholic intellectual and
the film is remembered for his stunning
use of the wide-angle lens to most potent
effect.
Unfortunately for Ghatak his films were
largely unsuccessful, many remained unreleased
for years and he abandoned almost as many
projects as he completed. Ultimately the
intensity of his passion, which gave his
films their power and emotion, took their
toll on him, as did tuberculosis and alcoholism.
However he has left behind a limited but
rich body of work that no serious scholar
of Indian Cinema can ignore.
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