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Synopsis

Abhijan was one of the most popular films (in Bengal) Ray has produced: a “conscious” effort to communicate with a wider audience. The project was originally one that his friends had conceived. Ray stepped in when his friends panicked at the prospect of directing. It was Ray’s mastery that turned this “conventional” plot from a stark to a subtly nuanced story. The theme of the film is the attempt to “buy” over an honest but impoverished young man by a financially sucessful middle-aged businessman.

The action takes place in Bihar (northwest of Bengal), around 1930. Narsingh, a proud and hot tempered rajput (originally from Rajastan), is a taxi driver with a passion for his vehicle. His license is taken away as he races a government official, but Sukhanram, a shady merchant, offers him a handsome fee to transport some merchandise. Narsingh, thus, finds himself drawn against his better judgement into trafficking in opium. The two main female characters Neeli and Gulabi form a contrast. Narasingh has a soft spot for Neeli who is a strong, reserved Catholic schoolmistress, and has no interest in him. The other female character is beautiful Gulabi who has been forced into prostitution by circumstances. Narasingh falls in love with Gulabi for her basic values.

In the end he redeems both himself and Gulabi and proves that every rule has an exception. –Satyajit Ray Film and Study Center

Director

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Satyajit Ray

India’s single most celebrated filmmaker, Satyajit Ray was born into a prominent Calcutta family on May 2, 1921. Ray’s grandfather, Upendrakishole Roychwdhury, was the creator of the popular children’s magazine Sandesh; his father, Sukhumar Ray (sometimes spelled Ra), was a noted poet and historian. After attending the Ballygunj government school, the younger Ray studied business science and physics at Calcutta’s Presidency College. From 1940 to 1942, he attended the University of Santinketan, a private establishment founded by an old family friend, Hindu poet Rabindranatah Tagore, the man largely credited with India’s 20th-century cultural renaissance. After graduation, Ray went to work as a commercial artist for the D. J. Keymer advertising agency in Calcutta. It was here that he was assigned to draw illustrations for Bhibuti Bashan Bannerjee’s classic autobiographical novel of Bengal life, Pather Panchali. Though he’d never had any formal cinematic training, he determined then and… read more

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Sayantani Ghosh

18Sep11

Gyanesh Mukherjee is just so adorable as the faithful friend in Abhijan.

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Sudipto Basu

25Mar11

One of Ray's most under-rated. Such an incisive document of class identity and the wish to climb up the social ladder.

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Arsaib

7Feb11

The restored version of Abhijan, a flawed yet fascinating effort which unfolds with the slow-burning intensity of a "noir," is now available on DVD courtesy of Eureka/MoC. This project was neither conceived by Ray nor was he the original choice to direct it, but it turned out to be one of his biggest successes in his native Bengal, something Ray had hoped for after the critical and financial failure of Kanchenjungha.

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Daniel S.

11Oct09

Shot in superb landscapes, Satyajit Ray's ABHIJAN teeters between melodrama and social study. And it works. One learns a lot about Indian castes and religions between two car chases. A great surprise. Highly recommended. A DVD zone discovery.

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Abhijan review

By Sudipto Basu on March 25, 2011

First of all, I unexpectedly got a lovely print. The Masters of Cinema series (Eureka!). Just wish some other Indian films of the period are restored soon.

Narsingh, a cynical cab-driver over…  read review

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