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This is an archive article published on August 28, 2015
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Opinion Ray of light

The film that set the road map for parallel cinema has turned 60.

satyajit ray, Pather Panchali, Pather Panchali movie, 60 years of Pather Panchali, Pather Panchali 60 years, satyajit ray Pather Panchali, entertainment news
August 28, 2015 12:00 AM IST First published on: Aug 28, 2015 at 12:00 AM IST
satyajit ray, Pather Panchali, Pather Panchali movie, 60 years of Pather Panchali, Pather Panchali 60 years, satyajit ray Pather Panchali, entertainment news Satyajit Ray’s iconic film “Pather Panchali” (Song of the Road) marked 60 years of its theatrical release today.

Pather Panchali, which recommended Indian cinema to the world’s attention and elevated Satyajit Ray to the level of early influences like Vittorio De Sica and Jean Renoir, is now a senior citizen of the film world. At 60, the classic is old enough to have not only inspired a body of documentary and critical work on itself, but even a film on the child actor who played its protagonist. Apur Panchali, which flits like a dragonfly between documentary and fiction, traces the life of Subir Banerjee, the child from Ray’s neighbourhood who played the pivotal role of Apu, the axis of the trilogy of Pather Panchali, Aparajito and Apur Sansar. Banerjee never acted again. He became a mill-worker when he grew up, and lived a life remote from the arts.

Pather Panchali invented new ways of seeing and showing that remain characteristic of Ray’s work. It used music not only to entertain but, along with silence and heightened ambient sound, to convey meaning. And it demonstrated the intensity and unity of vision that a polymath director could bring to cinema. Ray wrote the script from Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay’s story (he found the dialogue cinematically excellent), drew the storyboard, composed the score, designed costumes and settings, filmed and edited. Often, Ray even did the credits with his own hand. Though the finest creative talents worked on his films, they were marked by the imprint of a singular vision.

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Ray’s classic is old enough, but the Indian viewership may still not be old enough to know better. While Pather Panchali received critical acclaim in festivals overseas, at home, Ray was pilloried in Parliament by Nargis Dutt, for instance, for “exporting poverty”, and a dreary debate followed. He would have fared no better if he had made the film 60 years later. Mother India’s response to insufficiently patriotic art remains inimical.

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