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Dekha : Gautam Ghose’s next
GAUTAM
Ghose has begun his new feature film, Dekha, after a long hiatus since
Gudia, which had a rather lukewarm reception from both the masses and
critics when it was released some years ago. In fact, this Plus Channel
production starring Mithun Chakravarty, Pran and Nandana Sen did not get
a proper release at all and was rejected by the selection panel for an
Indian Panorama screening. Yet, it was based on a story by Mahasweta Devi.
Somewhere between Gudia and Dekha, Ghose did two significant films. One
was a short telefilm, Fakeer, in Hindi, and the other, an ambitious and
long documentary on filmmaker Satyajit Ray.
Fakeer, based on a story by Bibhuti Bhusan Bandopadhyay, bagged for its
main actor Pawan Malhotra, the Critics Award for the Best Actor last year
at the National Film Awards. Dekha is being produced by Ramesh Gandhi
of Rainbow Movies, the numero uno production house for television and
satellite software in Bengal.
"With Dekha, I am tackling the middle-class and upper middle-class
society for the first time. The subject of the film revolves around the
world I have seen and the world I have not seen. For example, there are
things that are visible to our vision, our eyes, but there are also many
things that lie beyond the frame of our immediate seeing. We are constantly
surrounded by incidents and happenings. We like some of them. We dont
like some too. Through this film, I have tried to thread a garland strung
together with experiences of my predecessors and my own experiences. The
film therefore, does not have a continuing narrative line. It is rather,
an attempt to grasp relationships between and among people of different
social classes, people within the same class," explained Gautam while
talking about Dekha.
Ghose is highly enthused about a small screen producers coming forward
to produce a feature film, that too, an off-mainstream one. "The
fact that Ramesh Gandhi has ventured into producing this film is an interesting
development. If you notice closely, you will find that over the past four
decades, quality film-making in Europe has been closely linked to television,
either through joint productive efforts, or with help from the small screen
world in different ways. This entry of small screen producers into feature
films is a welcome development. Channel Eight has also produced a feature
film before this in Bengal. One hopes these houses for software production
will eventually organise themselves to form a team like it has happened
in Europe. This helps in sustaining a good bonding and yet maintaining
a distance on the part of both television and the large screen".
he added.
The first schedule of shooting was in progress at Aurora Studios in Calcutta.
Soumitra Chatterjee, Indrani Haldar and Debasree Roy were readying themselves
for the next shot. Soumitra Chatterjee is portraying Sashibhushan, an
intellectual with Leftist leanings who also writes poetry. He has lost
his vision seventeen years ago to glaucoma. The two-story structure at
Aurora Studio is being used to represent Shashibhushans dilapidated
family home. Debasree is playing Sarama, a young divorcee who has taken
shelter in Sashibhushans house. Indrani Haldar plays Reema, who
edits a little magazine called Pragnya.
Sashibhushans life forms the central focus of the film.
Sashibhushan was involved with the Leftist revolution in Bengal in the
Seventies. However, with time, he realises that he is gradually losing
his position and his focus and his life begins to flow differently. Then,
he suffers an attack of glaucoma and loses his vision completely. When
the film opens, Sashibhushan is already and old man. His dotage is spent
mainly in clinging to memories of a bygone era, symbolised by the antiques
around his ancestral house - an old clock, old furniture, paintings, the
works. Sarama lives with her son in the same house.
Sashibhushan was once a student of Saramas father. Sarama is divorced
from her husband Nikhil, an artiste.
Saramas own story forms another layer of the story. With Saramas
entry into his life, Sashibhushans vision changes, and
he begins to view the world through Saramas and his
Man Friday Nibarans eyes. Then, one fine morning, Sarama receives
a letter from her old parents in North Bengal, who ask her to come and
live with them. Sashibhushan goes along with her. The natural environs,
the forest surroundings, the birds, the greenery, deeply influence Sashibhushan
and Sarama and their thoughts begin to change in certain subtle ways.
Here, they meet a young man, Gagan, who is genetically blind. He has arrived
from Rangpur in Bangladesh and is residing as a house-guest with Saramas
parents. He has a mellifluous voice and sings quite well. Sarama feels
a strange attraction for Gagan which, with time, transcends the borders
of a purely platonic friendship into something more deep, more physical.
By now however, Sashibhushan has begun to depend a great deal on Sarama
and her emotional diversion begins to assume the shape of a threat to
him. They come back to Calcutta. Gagan comes alongwith them. And then
begins this emotional tug-of-war within Sarama. She is trapped in an emotional
dilemma she finds difficult to come out of. On the one hand is her strong
physical attraction for Gagan. On the other, her emotional response to
Sashibhushans need for her.
Sashibhushan has also changed, and for the better. He has picked up his
love for the muse and has begun to compose poems again. What happens in
the end, is best left unrevealed at this point according to Gautam. Other
than the three stalwarts of Bengalis off-mainstream, Soumitra, Debasree
and Indrani, others in the cast are Paran Bandopadhyay (Nibaran), Biplab
Chattopadhyay (Biplab), Roopa Gangopadhyay (Roopa), Anjan Dutta (Nikhil),
Suman Deb (Saramas son) and Kamal Kanjilal who makes his film debut
in Dekha. Kanjilal incidentally, is a naturally blind person in real life
and Gautam has picked him from the Blind Opera in Calcutta. The original
storyline created by Gautam himself has been honed and sharpened by none
other than Sunil Gangopadhyay himself. Gautam has also done the cinematography
and composed the musical score for this film. The film is being edited
by Malay Banerjee, with make-up by Anoop Gangopadhyay, and production
design by Manik Banerjee. Nilanjana Ghosh is the costume designer and
Surajit Dasgupta. Dekha will have six songs sung by Swagatalakshmi Dasgupta,
oldtimer Gita Ghatak, Tapan Roy and Sraboni Sen. The film has been shot
extensively on location at Chapramari, Jhalang, Malbazar and some of the
beautifully picturesque locales of the hilly ranges of North Bengal. SAC.
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