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Jhilli
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| Jhilli | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Ishaan Ghose |
| Written by | Ishaan Ghose |
| Produced by | Goutam Ghose Ishaan Ghose |
| Starring | Bitan Biswas, Shombhunath De, Sayandeep Guha, Aranya Gupta, Sourav Nayak |
| Cinematography | Ishaan Ghose |
| Edited by | Ishaan Ghose |
| Music by | Soumajit Ghosh, Rajarshi Das |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
| Country | India |
| Language | Bengali |
| Budget | 5,000,000 |
Jhilli (transl. Discards) is a Bengali language film written and directed by Ishaan Ghose in 2021 and produced by Goutam Ghose Associates.[1][2][3][4] The film is about a boy named Bokul who resolves to make changes in his life after realizing that most of his friends are leaving him behind in the debris of discards.[5]
Plot
[edit]Bokul, a fourth-generation manual laborer, toils in the largest trash yard in Kolkata at a facility that crushes bones. He makes the most of his existence in his environment while being unaware of his difficulties. He has no idea that the outside world is transforming quickly and preparing for a new economic boom. His entire world was exchanged for a recreation area.[6][7]
Cast
[edit]- Bitan Biswas as Ganesh
- Shombhunath De as Shombhu
- Sayandeep Guha as Guddu
- Aranya Gupta as Bokul
- Sourav Nayak as Chompa
Production
[edit]The film was shot with a Sony a7sii camera and one lens – a Canon 16-35mm – on a hand-held stabilizer. With the lack of sound equipment, the sound was recreated completely in post-production with Aneesh Basu, which took a year during the pandemic. This was a self-funded production which had no shooting script and was heavily improvised.[8]
Awards
[edit]This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards. (April 2025) |
| Year | Awards | Category | Result | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Kolkata International Film Festival | International Competition: Innovation in Moving Images
Best Film | Golden Royal Bengal Tiger Award |
Won | [9][10][11] |
| 2022 | Mammoth Lakes Film Festival | INT'L Narrative Feature | Honorable Mention | [12] |
| 2023 | 69th National Film Awards | |||
| 2023 | Torino Film Festival | Premier | ||
| BFJA | 2023 | Best Debut Director, Best Cinematography | ||
| Filmfare Award | 2023 |
Reception
[edit]- There is hardship and suffering, but there is also a sense of belonging that is unmatched elsewhere. Nothing about Jhilli is fictitious. The existence of those among us who have been stripped off their identities and denied access to necessities of life. In this film, the protagonists are denied the opportunity to discover who they are. Instead, all they want is to live.[13]
- Ghose's film reveals a delirious and slurred story of a group of pals that drift in and out of each other's lives as they try to earn a livelihood from Dhapa or come up with wacky escape plans that are doomed to failure in this dystopian terrain.[14]
References
[edit]- ^ "TWO BENGALI FILMMAKERS WIN BIG AT KIFF". explorescreen.com. 10 May 2022. Archived from the original on 10 May 2022. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ "Jhilli () - Review, Star Cast, News, Photos". Cinestaan. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ Yalala, Sridhar. "Bengali film Jhilli' wins best film award". The Pynr. Archived from the original on 25 October 2022. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ NYOOOZ. "Bengali film 'Jhilli' wins best film award in KIFF international section | Kolkata NYOOOZ". NYOOOZ. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ Chatterji, Shoma A. (27 May 2022). "Budding Filmmaker Ishaan Ghose on his First Film Jhilli - Shoma A. Chatterji". TheSpace.Ink. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ "Film card". Torino Film Fest. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ Discards (in French), retrieved 25 October 2022
- ^ Ramnath, Nandini (11 May 2022). "Bengali film 'Jhilli' provides a scorching view of life in the dumps". Scroll.in. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ "Kolkata International Film Festival". kiff.in. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ Indiablooms. "Ishaan Ghose's Bengali film Jhilli bags best film award in international category in 27th KIFF | Indiablooms - First Portal on Digital News Management". Indiablooms.com. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ "The winners at KIFF this year, an eclectic mix of surprises". Get Bengal. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ Jhilli | Official Trailer | Ishaan Ghose | Goutam Ghose | An SVF Release, 4 November 2022, retrieved 14 November 2022
- ^ Banerjee, Aniruddha (13 July 2022). "Jhilli Discards 2021 Critical Analysis: A fault line within the shadows". Cinemamonogatari. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
- ^ "Gardeners in the Wasteland: On Ishaan Ghose's Jhilli (Discards)". www.asapconnect.in. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
External links
[edit]Jhilli
View on GrokipediaSynopsis
Plot Summary
Jhilli depicts the life of Bokul, a fourth-generation manual laborer employed in a bone-crushing factory situated within Kolkata's expansive Dhapa garbage dump.[4] Oblivious to the pervasive squalor, drug use, and social alienation surrounding him, Bokul navigates daily existence amid fellow slum dwellers who scavenge and toil in the refuse heaps for survival.[3] [2] The narrative traces his growing awareness as peers progressively abandon the dump yard, escaping the entrenched cycle of poverty and disposability that defines their "jhilli" (discards) reality.[3] [6] This realization prompts Bokul to confront his stagnation and pursue transformative change, highlighting themes of human endurance amid urban marginalization.[4] [7]Production
Development and Pre-Production
Ishaan Ghose, son of filmmaker Goutam Ghose, developed Jhilli as his directorial debut after gaining experience as a camera assistant and in documentaries, culminating in confidence after approximately 12 years of preparation starting around 2011.[8] The project's origins trace to 2013, when Ghose abandoned a planned documentary on ragpickers in nearby Tiljala due to legal constraints, prompting repeated exploratory visits to Kolkata's Dhapa dumping ground and bone-processing factories.[9] These visits highlighted the site's human toll—scavengers processing waste byproducts known as jhilli (discards)—and the socioeconomic disparities evident in its proximity to luxury developments like Trump Towers, just 2 kilometers away.[8][9] Initially envisioned as a scriptless documentary, the film evolved into a narrative fiction during pre-production, with Ghose incorporating NGO fieldwork conducted with his sister Anandi in 2016 among Tiljala ragpickers, though this too was halted by external issues.[8] The story centered Dhapa itself as a core "character," focusing on marginalized workers' endurance amid factory closures and urban encroachment, drawing subtle influences from Ghose's personal psychological experiences without adhering to conventional plotting.[8][10] Pre-production remained organic and low-key, involving discreet site scouting and casting locals, including brothers of a childhood acquaintance for key roles, to capture authentic conditions; the production was backed by Goutam Ghose Associates.[9] Script development occurred iteratively on location rather than through a fixed pre-written structure, allowing flexibility to reflect the improvisational lives depicted, with refinements planned for post-production editing.[8] This approach marked Jhilli as the first Bengali feature film explicitly set in Dhapa, emphasizing raw observation over scripted drama to portray class divides and human resilience.[9] Principal photography, bridging pre- and main production phases, spanned 30 days from 2017 to 2019, conducted with minimal crew to avoid disrupting the environment.[10]Casting and Crew
Jhilli was written and directed by Ishaan Ghose in his feature film debut, with Ghose also handling cinematography and editing.[11] The production was led by producers Goutam Ghose and Ishaan Ghose, alongside executive producers Anandi Ghose and Neelanjana Ghose.[11] Goutam Ghose, a veteran Bengali filmmaker and father of Ishaan Ghose, provided key support in bringing the independent project to fruition.[12] The principal cast consists primarily of emerging actors portraying characters from a Kolkata slum community facing displacement. Aranya Gupta leads as Bokul, the central figure who confronts the loss of his childhood surroundings, with Bitan Biswas as Ganesh, Shombhunath De as Shombhu, Sayandeep Guha as Guddu, and Sourav Nayak as Chompa.[11] These roles emphasize raw, non-professional performances to capture the authenticity of working-class youth dynamics.[13] Additional crew contributions include music composition by Soumyajit Ghosh and Rajarshi Das, who focused on integrating ambient sounds recreated in post-production due to limited on-set equipment during the COVID-19 pandemic.[14] Sound design was handled by Rajarshi Das, addressing challenges from pandemic-related restrictions that extended post-production by a year.[15] The film's low-budget, family-involved production reflects its roots in personal storytelling over commercial casting.[8]Filming and Technical Aspects
Principal photography for Jhilli took place primarily at the Dhapa dumping ground on the eastern fringes of Kolkata, West Bengal, India, capturing the raw environment of the city's largest landfill site amid ongoing waste processing activities.[8][2] Additional guerrilla-style sequences were filmed on urban streets, including Park Street and rooftops near New Market, to depict characters' movements beyond the dump yard.[16][2] Shooting occurred intermittently from 2017 to 2019, spanning approximately 30 days, with the process extending discreetly over four to five years to accommodate the independent, self-funded nature of the production.[2][16] Filmmakers faced significant environmental challenges, including pervasive filth, slush, and odors, necessitating daily hygiene measures for the minimal crew and testing physical and mental endurance.[8][16] The film employed a Sony A7S II mirrorless camera paired with a single Canon 16-35mm f/2.8 lens mounted on a handheld stabilizer, such as a glidecam, to enable mobile, low-budget capture suited to the chaotic setting.[2][16] Cinematography, handled by director Ishaan Ghose, utilized anxious handheld movements to mirror the characters' frenetic survival efforts, employing muted, low-key color grading to evoke the desolation of the dump yard while blending documentary realism with fictional narrative.[8][2] No location sound was recorded due to equipment limitations, resulting in all audio—including dialogue and ambient effects—being recreated in post-production by sound designer Aneesh Basu from June 2020 to July 2021.[2][16] Editing was also performed by Ghose, involving iterative refinements to shape the improvised footage into a fluid, 93-minute structure without a fixed shooting script.[8][2] These technical choices reflected the film's ultra-independent ethos, prioritizing authenticity and minimal intrusion into subjects' lives over conventional production values, with no dedicated production design or extensive crew to maintain a precarious, immersive aesthetic.[2] The approach yielded intense, uncomfortable visuals that underscored urban squalor, though constrained resources limited promotional and distribution efforts post-completion during the COVID-19 pandemic.[16][2]Release
Premiere and Festival Screenings
Jhilli had its world premiere at the 27th Kolkata International Film Festival (KIFF), held from April 25 to May 1, 2022, where it competed in the international competition section and received the Best Film award in the Innovations in Moving Images category.[17][18] The festival screening marked the debut of director Ishaan Ghose's feature, produced by his father Goutam Ghose, and drew attention for its raw depiction of life in Kolkata's Dhapa dump yard.[19] Subsequent festival screenings included an appearance at the 40th Torino Film Festival in November 2022, presented in the Fuori Concorso/Incubator section, highlighting its international appeal with screenings on big screens and streaming across Italy.[20][21] The film's United States premiere occurred at the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival from May 25 to 29, 2022, in the International Narrative Feature category, where it was noted for its spectacular and grotesque imagery of urban scavenging.[22] These selections underscored Jhilli's recognition in both regional and global festival circuits prior to its wider theatrical and digital releases.[23]Distribution and Availability
Jhilli received a limited theatrical release in West Bengal on November 11, 2022, distributed by SVF, a prominent Bengali film production and distribution company, following its festival premieres.[24][25] The film's path to commercial distribution was marked by challenges typical of independent Bengali cinema, including delays after its 2021 international premiere at the Torino Film Festival, with domestic release occurring over a year later due to logistical hurdles in securing exhibitors and promoters.[26] Post-theatrical, Jhilli became available on digital streaming platforms, including Amazon Prime Video and Hoichoi, expanding access beyond initial festival and cinema screenings.[27][28] As an indie production without a large marketing budget, its availability relies on these OTT services rather than widespread physical media or international theatrical runs, reflecting broader constraints in Bengali film's distribution ecosystem where revenues have declined amid competition from mainstream Hindi and regional industries.[16] No evidence indicates broad international distribution beyond select festivals, limiting its global footprint to online viewership in supported regions.Accolades
Awards and Nominations
Jhilli received accolades primarily from Indian film awards and festivals, recognizing its technical achievements and performances. At the 27th Kolkata International Film Festival in 2022, the film won the Golden Royal Bengal Tiger Award for Best Film in the Innovations in Moving Images category.[17] In the 69th National Film Awards, announced on August 24, 2023, for films released in 2021, Jhilli secured two honors: Best Audiography (Re-recordist of the final mixed track) for Aneesh Basu, and a Special Mention (feature film) for child artists Aranya Gupta and Bithan Biswas.[29][30] The film was nominated for Best Film at the West Bengal Film Journalists' Association Awards in 2022, competing alongside entries such as Aparajito and four others.[31]| Award Ceremony | Year | Category | Recipient | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kolkata International Film Festival | 2022 | Best Film (Innovations in Moving Images) | Jhilli (directed by Ishaan Ghose) | Won[17] |
| National Film Awards (69th) | 2023 | Best Audiography | Aneesh Basu | Won[29] |
| National Film Awards (69th) | 2023 | Special Mention (Feature Film) | Aranya Gupta & Bithan Biswas | Won[29] |
| West Bengal Film Journalists' Association Awards | 2022 | Best Film | Jhilli | Nominated[31] |
