Director: Satyajit Ray; Writer: Satyajit Ray, Premendra Mitra; Producer: R.D. Bansal; Cinematographer: Soumendu Roy; Editor: Dulal Dutta; Cast: Soumitra Chatterjee, Madhabi Mukherjee, Haradhan Bannerjee
Duration: 01:09:48; Aspect Ratio: 1.333:1; Hue: 245.294; Saturation: 0.000; Lightness: 0.280; Volume: 0.061; Cuts per Minute: 4.842; Words per Minute: 36.842
Summary: Story from Premendra Mitra’s Janaiko Kapuruser Kahini.
Ray’s morality play, usually shown with Mahapurush (1964), continues his ensemble play format. Both films were dubbed in Hindi and commercially released. Movie writer Amitabha Roy (Chatterjee) finds shelter with a tea magnate (Bannerjee) in Darjeeling when his car breaks down. He finds that the magnate is married to his former lover Karuna (Mukherjee). The film intercuts the banal conversation of the long evening and a picnic the next day with flashbacks showing how Roy had once betrayed Karuna. He offers, in a hurriedly written note, to marry her if she wishes to leave her husband. She turns him down, arriving at their rendezvous simply to recover a bottle of sleeping pills. Critic Chidananda Das Gupta saw the film as a sequel to Charulata (1964), replaying the man’s inability to defy social norms.
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