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| Sharmila wth Nandita Das in Shubho
Mahurat |
behind the camera
Bengali cinema has also
had some significant contributions from the journalist fraternity.
Subrata Sen, a journalist for a decade with Ananda Bazar
Patrika and The Statesman , and made the transition
to filmmaking, with the successful Ek Je Aache Kanya.
He followed it up with the controversial Swapner Feriwala,
the experimental Nil Nirjane (Indias first
digital full-length feature film) and the oversexed Hothat
Neerar Jonye. He has also tried his hand at the telefilm
format with Shirinra ? once again, an experimental
and interesting venture.
Sudeshna Roy, a journalist
with ABP and other papers for many years, worked on TV serials
and telefilms for quite a while, and assisted Aparna Sen
and Rituparno Ghosh before graduating to feature film direction.
Her first film, Shudhu Tumi, which she has co-directed
with Abhijit Guha, released last Puja. She has also assisted
director Mahesh Manjrekar on It Was Raining That Night
(the English version of Astitva).
Before the camera
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| Sharmila Tagore and Uttam Kumar in
Nayak |
The most unforgettable
journalist in Bengali cinema is, of course, Sharmila Tagore
in Satyajit Rays Nayak (1966). The editor of
a small womens publication, Sharmila was intelligent,
intellectual, poised, dignified and a trifle snooty. Not
taken in by the outward glamour of matinee idol Arindam
Mukherjee (Uttam Kumar), she asked him probing, searching
questions, helping the troubled superstar to come to terms
with himself.
In Rays Charulata
(1964), Sailen Mukherjee played Charus husband,
Bhupati, the liberal, progressive and very Brahmo editor-publisher
of a nationalist newspaper. Deeply absorbed in his work
and passionately involved in the Freedom Movement, Bhupati
had no time for his beautiful, intelligent and very lonely
wife.
Rays Ganashatru
had Manoj Mitra in the role of Adhir, the rational,
Left-leaning newspaper editor, who gave in to social pressure
and refused to publish Dr Ashoke Guptas (Soumitra
Chatterjee) article warning people about the contaminated
holy water of the local temple.
Utpal Dutt played the sharp,
astute editor of a leading newspaper, who asks a sensitive
young man (Anjan Dutta) to do a newsy, yet intimate story
of his own middle class milieu, in Mrinal Sens Chalchitra
(1981). The young man, endowed with erratic enthusiasm,
sets every bit of situation he comes across to critical
analysis, but fails to build a wholesome reportage. He then
meets the editor a second time, and the inevitable compromise
follows.
Nandita Das was a cute
little rookie journalist in Rituparno Ghoshs Shubho
Mahurat (2003). Bubbly, enthusiastic and trying very
hard to be taken seriously, Nandita was immensely likeable.
Goutam Ghoses Dekha
(2001) featured Indrani Halder as one of those by-the-way
journalists. She came into Soumitra Chatterjees house
on the pretext of doing a story, but spent most of the film
getting intricately entangled in a complicated affair with
him.
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