Exclusive Premium Content

Devi Chowdhurani: Prosenjit Plays An 18th Century Feminist

Rating: ***

Remember how Rajesh Khanna , for all his unparalleled stardom, took the backseat for Sharmila Tagore in Amar Prem?  In the  passionately mounted new version  of Bankim Chandra Chatterjee’s   Devi Chowdhurani Prosenjit Chatterjee gladly and without the least self-congratulation, takes  the second place  to Srabanti Chatterjee who plays the titular role  with  an  intensity that may not burn a hole in your soul, but it achieves its goal.

This is an 18th century  epic saga, full  of  sound  and fury,  and  striking images of  patriotic  scuffles, shot with an  admirable fervour  by  Anirban  Chatterjee. The cinematographer  lenses  the  characters, a bunch of  mendicant bandits  and the ‘Laal Mooh’ Britishers , in shadowy dark and  ominous shades. It is  like being there, and yet not being  allowed to get beyond the checkpost.

This is  not an immersive experience in the way we have known cinema to be. Writer-director Subhrajit Mitra doesn’t want us to “know” the  characters. He  wants us to  experience their conflicts  from  an  evaluative  distance, neither judging nor condemning them.

This movie adaptation  moves  closer to Bankim novel, and away from the  1974  screen  adaptation  in which Suchitra Sen was magnificent  in her dignity as  a disempowered woman who rises  from the ashes to become  the  protector and saviour of  the poor at a time when  the  colonisers  and feudal landlords gave tyranny  a  new dimension.

Srabanti Chatterjee tries hard to  do justice  to a  role immortalized by  Suchitra Sen and succeeds partially. She fares much better in  the emotional moments as compared with the action sequences where she has   rough time inducing aggression.

Prosenjit Chatterjee, stepping into the role originally done  by  Ranjit Mallick,  has a lot more substantial  role  than the original. He plays Profullo’s mentor  guide  with  a mix of reverence and protectiveness, standing just behind her  and yet  in many ways, navigating her  journey  from victim  to saviour.

Ironically the film works  much better on the emotional level,for example Profullo’s bonding with her estranged  husband’s second wife Sagar(played by  the lovely Darshana Banik who looks like  Aishwarya Rai in Chokher Bali).

The  action sequences  are diminished  by the  budgetary  constrints.  The ships sailing in the ocean look like toyboats in  a bath tub.Which is in some  ways is  emblematic  of the lives lived  in Bengal in  the 18th century where  every  Bengali was  a closeted  revolutionary struggling to  emerge from an intellectual cocoon.

Devi Chowdhurani doesn’t quite capture the epic canvas of the novel. But it brings  a wistful wisdom to  the portrayal of the characters;  even a British stooge  like  Haraballabh Ray(Sabyasachi Chakrabarty, making  a welcome  comeback) is what he  is on account of  the historic forces that shaped  Colonial India.

 

Comments

Most Popular

To Top