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The Kingdom of Diamonds

Heerak Rajar Deshe

India

1980

118 Min
Color
1.33:1
Bengali
  • Currently 3.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Satyajit Ray

SCR Satyajit Ray

DP Soumendu Roy

CAST Soumitra Chatterjee, Tapan Chatterjee, Santosh Dutta, Utpal Dutt, Robi Ghosh

ED Dulal Dutta

MUSIC Satyajit Ray, Anup Ghoshal, Amar Pal

Synopsis

This film is the sequel to The Adventures of Goopy and Bagha. Ten years have passed in the kingdom of Shundi. Our two heroes have married the princesses and each has a child, but they have become bored with their lives. An invitation arrives from the Kingdom of Diamonds, inspiring them to pay a visit to that land. The ruler there behaves despotically, bleeding his people with taxes and exploiting them in his diamond mine; he wants a scientist to build him a brainwashing machine. A professor, Udayan, tries to incite the people to rise up against this tyrant, but the king closes the schools as the machine invented by the scientist begins to work. In the midst of all this, Goopy and Bagha meet the professor and join forces with him in order to liberate the populace from their oppressor. –Satyajit Ray Film and Study Center

Director

Original

Satyajit Ray

Satyajit Ray is one of cinema’s truest Renaissance men. In addition to his films, he is a reputed writer of short stories, a music composer (scores for his own films and other film-makers, notably Merchant-Ivory’s Shakespeare Wallah) and a painter and graphic designer of considerable skill. Appropriately enough, Ray derived from a background of great culture, the son of poet Sukumar Ray who died when he was three years old. His interest in fine arts, literature and painting led him to reside at Rabindranath Tagore’s Santiniketan (an intellectual retreat for artists and thinkers) for a significant period of time. Ray’s true love however was the cinema. The cinema of 30s Hollywood, which included Fred Astaire musicals and comedies by Ernst Lubitsch; Russian films he devoured in repeated viewings at the Calcutta Film Society (which he co-founded in 1947) and later the Italian neorealist films which he discovered in London.
At the time of the Second World War, and the final period of… read more

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Sudipto Basu

26Dec10

Greatest dialogues ever. More than a bit of Sukumar Ray (Satyajit's father) in the witty lines.

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