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Khandhar
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| Khandahar | |
|---|---|
French poster of the film | |
| Directed by | Mrinal Sen |
| Screenplay by | Mrinal Sen Premendra Mitra |
| Based on | Telenapota Abishkar by Premendra Mitra |
| Produced by | Jagadish Choukhani |
| Starring | Shabana Azmi Naseeruddin Shah Sreela Majumdar |
| Cinematography | K. K. Mahajan |
| Edited by | Mrinmoy Chakraborty |
| Music by | Bhaskar Chandavarkar |
Release date |
|
| Country | India |
| Language | Hindi |
Khandhar (English: Ruins) is a 1984 Indian Hindi-language film directed by Mrinal Sen, based on Premendra Mitra's Bengali short story Telenapota Abishkar (Discovering Telenapota).[1] The film stars Shabana Azmi, Naseeruddin Shah and Pankaj Kapur.[2] It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival.[3]
Plot
[edit]Three friends from the city visit some ruins where an aged mother (Gita Sen) and her daughter Jamini live. The mother awaits the arrival of a distant cousin to marry Jamini, but the man is already married and living in Calcutta. The photographer Subhash takes pity on the family and pretends to be the awaited suitor. They keep up the charade for the duration of the trio's visit, Subhash quietly becoming attracted to Jamini even as he understands the fate awaiting her. When the friends leave, Jamini stays behind, facing a life of loneliness in the ruins.
Cast
[edit]- Shabana Azmi as Jamini
- Naseeruddin Shah as Subhash
- Gita Sen as The Mother
- Pankaj Kapur as Dipu
- Annu Kapoor as Anil
- Sreela Majumdar as Gauri
- Rajen Tarafder as Harihar
Awards
[edit]- 1985: Chicago International Film Festival: Grand Prize (Best Film)[4]
- 1985 Filmfare Best Screenplay Award: Mrinal Sen
- 1984 National Film Award for Best Director: Mrinal Sen[5]
- 1984 National Film Award for Best Actress: Shabana Azmi[5]
- 1984 National Film Award for Best Editing : Mrinmoy Chakraborty[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Gulzar; Govind Nihalani; Saibal Chatterjee (2003). Encyclopaedia of Hindi cinema. Popular Prakashan. p. 337. ISBN 81-7991-066-0. Archived from the original on 30 August 2023. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
- ^ Sethi, Sunil (28 February 1984). "Khandhar: Directed by Mrinal Sen, starring Shabana Azmi, Naseeruddin Shah, Pankaj Kapoor". India Today. New Delhi: Living Media India Limited. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: Khandhar". festival-cannes.com. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
- ^ "50 Years of Memories: Highlights from the History of the Chicago International Film Festival" (PDF). chicagofilmfestival.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 April 2016. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
- ^ a b c "31st National Film Awards" (PDF). Directorate of Film Festivals. p. 6. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2011.
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External links
[edit]Khandhar
View on GrokipediaBackground and development
Literary source
The short story Telenapota Abishkar (translated as The Discovery of Telenapota) serves as the literary foundation for the film Khandhar. It was written by Premendra Mitra, a prominent Bengali author known for his contributions to poetry, fiction, and journalism.[5][6] Premendra Mitra (1904–1988) was born in Varanasi and raised in a railway family, beginning his literary career in 1923 with short stories published in the journal Probasi, such as Shudhu Kerani and Gopan Charini.[5] He co-edited the satirical magazine Kalikalam in 1926 and emerged as a key figure in post-1930s Bengali literature, influenced by Rabindranath Tagore yet developing a distinctive voice in poetry and prose.[5] Mitra's oeuvre emphasized social realism, critiquing urban hypocrisy, the futility of modern life, and the struggles of the working class through works like the poetry collections Prothoma (1932) and Somrat (1940), and short story anthologies such as Mahanagar (1937).[5][7] Telenapota Abishkar was first published in 1952 as part of Mitra's short story collection Premendra Mitrer Shreshtha Galpo.[8] The narrative centers on a journey to the remote, forsaken village of Telenapota, where travelers encounter a crumbling mansion inhabited by an elderly blind woman and her daughter, evoking a sense of rural isolation amid malaria-infested landscapes.[6] This atmospheric tale unfolds through the discovery of an abandoned estate, highlighting the characters' entrapment in a decaying environment.[6] The story explores profound themes of rural decay, where once-prosperous settings have succumbed to neglect and abandonment.[6] Central to its narrative are illusory hopes, embodied in the old woman's unwavering faith in a long-absent suitor's return, underscoring unfulfilled dreams and emotional stagnation.[6] It also meditates on the inexorable passage of time in desolate places, with ruins serving as metaphors for lost vitality and societal erosion, aligning with Mitra's broader social realist critique of human disconnection.[6][5] Director Mrinal Sen adapted Telenapota Abishkar into the 1984 film Khandhar, transposing its essence to Hindi cinema.[1]Pre-production
Mrinal Sen developed an interest in adapting Premendra Mitra's short story Telenapota Abishkar for Khandhar to address the stagnation and poverty prevalent in rural India during the 1980s, a period marked by economic disparities and social inertia in remote villages. This choice represented a shift from Sen's earlier overtly political works, allowing him to explore themes of escapism, longing, and the emotional desolation of rural life through a more lyrical lens.[1] Sen personally wrote the screenplay, introducing modifications to the original narrative to align with parallel cinema aesthetics, such as amplifying the visual symbolism of ruins to represent not only physical decay but also the stalled aspirations and helplessness of its inhabitants. These changes emphasized minimal dialogue and relied heavily on evocative imagery and silences to convey the characters' inner turmoil, diverging from the story's more straightforward atmospheric tale.[1] The film's production was backed by producer Jagadish Choukhani. Funding art-house projects like this was challenging in the early 1980s due to limited commercial viability for non-mainstream Indian cinema, with filmmakers often relying on government grants and modest budgets typical of parallel films, reflecting the broader difficulties faced by independent filmmakers during this era.[9] Initial location research focused on rural areas in West Bengal, including sites in Birbhum and Burdwan districts, to capture the desolate, crumbling environments that mirrored the story's themes of isolation and ruin. Sen and his team scouted multiple villages to select authentic backdrops that enhanced the film's poetic portrayal of rural abandonment.[4]Production
Casting
The casting of Khandhar drew from the pool of talented performers in India's parallel cinema movement, with director Mrinal Sen selecting actors renowned for their nuanced, immersive portrayals that suited the film's exploration of isolation and longing. Shabana Azmi was cast in the central role of Jamini, the isolated daughter, drawing on her established rapport with Sen from their prior collaboration in Ek Din Pratidin (1979), where she had demonstrated her ability to embody complex emotional states. Azmi actively lobbied for the part, persistently convincing Sen to entrust her with it despite initial reservations.[10] Naseeruddin Shah, celebrated for his method-oriented approach in art-house films, was chosen as Subhash, the urban photographer, bringing intensity and subtlety to the character's internal conflict; this marked the beginning of Shah's professional relationship with Sen, later extended in Genesis (1986). Pankaj Kapur portrayed Dipu, the boisterous friend, while Annu Kapoor took on the role of Anil, the more reserved companion, both actors contributing their emerging strengths in realistic ensemble dynamics. The supporting cast featured Gita Sen—Sen's wife—as the ailing mother, Sreela Majumdar as Gauri, the caretaker's daughter, and Rajen Tarafder as the caretaker, rounding out the familial and rural ensemble with authentic, understated presence.[11] Assembling this cast for a non-commercial venture in 1983–1984 proved challenging amid the era's economic pressures on parallel cinema, where limited funding and lack of mainstream incentives required actors' dedication to artistic vision over financial gain, often involving rigorous auditions to ensure alignment with Sen's improvisational style.[12]Filming
Principal photography for Khandhar commenced in 1983 and was conducted primarily in rural West Bengal, India, utilizing the desolate ruins of an abandoned mansion outside Shantiniketan in the Birbhum district to evoke the film's themes of decay and entrapment.[2] These crumbling structures, including dilapidated temples and courtyards in nearby villages like Kalikapur and Raipur, provided an authentic backdrop that blended seamlessly with the narrative's portrayal of stagnation.[13][14] The cinematography was handled by K.K. Mahajan, a frequent collaborator with director Mrinal Sen, who captured the desolation through natural lighting and extended long takes that emphasized the barren landscapes and the subtle interplay of light and shadow within the ruins.[3][2] This approach heightened the visual poetry of the film, allowing unspoken tensions and silences to emerge organically from the environment.[15] Sen employed directorial techniques rooted in documentary-style realism, featuring elliptical dialogue, understated performances, and minimal intervention to foster an improvisational feel among the actors, thereby mirroring the raw, unpolished quality of everyday rural life.[2] The production faced logistical hurdles due to the remote, inaccessible terrain, compounded by the low-budget constraints typical of Sen's independent cinema, which necessitated a streamlined schedule.[16]Plot
Subhash, a city photographer fascinated by ruins, joins his friends Dipu and Anil on a weekend trip to Dipu's ancestral village near Shantiniketan, West Bengal, now abandoned and decaying after a malaria epidemic. While exploring the dilapidated mansion, Subhash photographs the surroundings and encounters Jamini, a young woman living there with her blind and bedridden mother. Jamini tends to her mother, who clings to the delusion that her long-abandoned son-in-law will return to marry Jamini and rescue them from poverty. Mistaking Subhash for this relative due to her failing sight, the mother joyfully welcomes him, and Subhash, moved by pity, goes along with the pretense.[17][18] Over the next few days, Subhash spends time with Jamini, capturing her daily struggles and quiet resilience through his camera. Jamini shares her trapped existence, bound by duty to her mother and fading hopes for escape, while Subhash grapples with growing affection for her amid the symbolic decay around them. The friends discuss the village's plight and Jamini's future, but as their visit ends, Subhash faces a dilemma about staying or leaving. Ultimately, he departs with Dipu and Anil, unable to uproot Jamini's life, leaving her to continue in the ruins. Years later, Subhash remains haunted by a photograph he took of Jamini, symbolizing unfulfilled longing.[17][18][19]Cast
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Shabana Azmi | Jamini |
| Naseeruddin Shah | Subhash |
| Gita Sen | The Mother |
| Pankaj Kapur | Dipu |
| Annu Kapoor | Anil |
| Sreela Majumdar | Gauri |
| Rajen Tarafder | Harihar |
