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View Full Version : ek nodir galpo – a re-review, Mithun Chakraborty, Shweta



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2nd February 2008, 05:14 PM
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Starring
Mithun Chakraborty, Shweta Prasad, Anjan Srivastav, Krishnakishore Mukherjee, Nirmal Kumar, Bulbul Choudhury and Jishu Sengupta

Story
Sunil Gangopadhyay

Screenplay and Dialogue
Samir Chanda

Editing
Sanjib Dutta

Audiography
Anup Mukherjee

Make-up
Debi Haldar

Production Design
Samir Chanda

Cinematography
Rajen C Kothari

Music
Nachiketa

Produced by
Sangeeta Ajay Agarwal and Lila Chanda

Directed by
Samir Chanda

http://www.upperstall.com/Bengali/images/general/Ekti-Nodir-Galpo-Mithun-One.jpg

Synopsis

Darakeshwar is the village postmaster. He lives with his only daughter Anjana who becomes the only girl in the village to graduate from high school and take admission in the city college. The doting father waits at the bus stop every evening to fetch his daughter as she returns from the city. One evening, Anjana does not come back. Just as the villagers climb onto their gossip machine, the body of the girl is fished out of the Keleghai river that runs along the village. Darakeshwar’s first reaction is to refuse to accept the truth. When he actually sees his daughter’s body, he decides, in the face of the scandalized villagers, to give the girl a river burial. “She is not dead. She will come back to life,” he says, mainly to himself. Instead of filing a FIR that could bring the culprit to book, he makes it his life’s mission to change the name of the river from Keleghai to Anjana, after his dead daughter. He forgets about his job, about his basic needs and trots from pillar to post, trying to find out how the name of the river can be changed. For the officials he visits, it is an appeal they have never heard of before – changing the name of a river – who has ever heard of this? They find it strange that a father whose daughter has been gang-raped, murdered and her body dumped in the very river whose name he seeks to change and she loved so dearly, does not care about bringing the culprits to book. They think he is a nut case. Little boys pelt stones at him as he canvases his cause from village to village, laughed and ogled at, made the butt of jokes and given up as a lost case. At the end of the day, he sits on the riverbank and talks to his dead daughter. A young and honest police officer begins a manhunt for the killers of the young girl on his own. He catches the gang of rapists who killed the girl but Darakeshwar is unmoved. He finally decides to solve his problem on his own. The sympathetic district magistrate, unable to help him officially or legally, helps in his personal capacity. As Darakeshwar tries to dig a hole on the riverbank to put in a wooden post with a banner with ‘Anjana’ written on it, the DM tells him, “I will dig the hole and you put in the post.”

Is strict fidelity to the original literary source possible? Or is it even necessary? Should we, as viewers, take fidelity as a methodological principle to be followed by the filmmaker who chooses to adapt a literary source to make his film? All these questions get raised as one watches production designer Samir Chanda’s entry into direction with Ek Nadir Galpo. Based on a story Ekti Nodir Naam, authored by the noted Sunil Gangopadhyay that haunted Chanda from the time he was in college, Ek Nodir Galpo moves beyond the limitations of the written word. It defines grief as an overwhelming emotion that can change the life of a man, less than ordinary, radically and irreversibly for an extraordinary and unique cause.

Ek Nodir Galpo is a poignant celluloid document that throws up an extraordinary perspective on the dedication of a human being towards a cause that may seem crazy to most. Through what may seem a simple story of love between a father and his motherless daughter, the film subtly but steadily covers other areas such as, our losing link with nature presented metaphorically through the river; the casual negligence of officialdom when the person approaching it is either thought to be nutty, or poor, or both; the value-centric integrity that still sustains among a few officers; the empathy that sometimes peeps out of the steel exterior of a strict DM; the river presented as a physical reality, as an integral part of the lives of those who live near it, the river as a metaphor for the anger presented through high tide, as a vehicle of death, as a soother of the mind, as a carrier of dead bodies, as an indirect upholder of the human spirit; and finally, the river as a symbol of Darakeshwar’s dead daughter if only through its imaginary new name – Anjana. The river is an omnipresence that carries ambivalent meanings throughout the film. True to its name, symbolically speaking, the film is more the story of a river than of a father and his daughter.
http://www.upperstall.com/Bengali/images/general/Ekti-Nodir-Galpo-Mithun-Two.jpg

At the heart of the film, its life and soul is the superb performance of Mithun Chakraborty as Darakeshwar. As he struggles to get the river named after his daughter, he changes his looks, his body language and even his voice. He stops shaving or going for a haircut becoming oblivious to the tattering clothes on his body, or the strange stares of people as he stands up on a makeshift podium to make an impromptu speech asking the people to sign on his signature campaign, or, to the boys who pelt him with stones as he walks by. Contrast this to the scenes with him as the smiling father laughing away at his daughter’s pranks, or making plans for her future and you see one of the most memorable performances come alive on screen by any actor in any language in the history of Indian cinema. This is perhaps Mithun’s best performance ever, Mrigaya (1976) and Tahader Katha, notwithstanding. Shweta Prasad as the adolescent daughter Anjana is a natural performer who does not betray any awe about acting with one of the best actors Indian cinema has ever produced. Krishnakishore Mukherjee as the kindly but stern DM and Jishu Sengupta as the conscience-ridden police officer are very good too as are Bulbul Choudhury as the concerned neighbour and Rahul Prasad as her grandson.

Nachiketa who has done the musical score for the film, revives an old folk number sung by young brides and marriageable girls. The song offers a point of relief in the tragic story of love on the one hand and the strength of the human spirit on the other. The music has a gentle flow to it, in harmony with the river flowing along. Rajen C Kothari’s cinematography is low-key and subtly captures the village ambience with its browns and ambers aesthetically. Shot almost entirely on location along the banks of the river Bhagirati, in a village called Naliapur in Burdwan district, the film is a rich visual experience. Anup Mukherjee’s sound design flows like the soft and soothing waves of the Keleghai river. Sanjib Dutta’s editing does justice to the dramatic changes in the mood of the film from innocent joy, to a bonding between two individuals, through shock, grief, moving from the village to the neighbouring town into government offices to village market places and streets only to come back, like the proverbial bad coin, again and again, to the banks of the Keleghai river. Chanda’s dialogue retains the local inflections of the Bengali dialect spoken by the region the film portrays.

There are three National Award winners sharing the credits of the film. One is director Samir Chanda himself who, as production designer, has won several National Awards, Mithun Chakraborty is another National Award winner several times over and the third is Shweta Prasad, who won the National Award for the Best Child Artiste in 2003. But these hardly count in a film where the contribution of every single member of the team speaks for itself. One hopes Chanda sustains the spirit of excellence and dedication he reveals in his first film, much like his protagonist’s single-minded dedication to attain an incredible goal. In a film like this, you can cheerfully forget the story it has been adapted from. For Ek Nodir Galpo, the film is the story.

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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