This is the second film about the detective Feluda (Soumitra Chatterjee) set in the holy city of Benares, where he (along with his cousin, Topshe and friend, Lalmohan Ganguly) goes for a holiday. But the theft of a priceless deity of Lord Ganesh (the Elephant God) from a local household forces him to start investigation. Feluda comes in direct confrontation with Maganlal Meghraj (Utpal Dutt), a ruthless trader. Maganlal makes the mild-mannered Lalmohan a knife-thrower’s target and threatens Felu to stop investigation. But there are several other suspects as an innocent artisan is brutally murdered, a shady ‘holy man’ holds court on the banks of the Ganges and an adventure-loving little boy (and his grand-father), brought up on crime thrillers. The climax is a shoot-out on the Ganges, followed by the unraveling of the mystery.Read More »
Bengali
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Satyajit Ray – Joi Baba Felunath AKA The Elephant God (1979)
1971-1980AdventureCrimeIndiaSatyajit Ray -
Buddhadev Dasgupta – Charachar AKA Shelter of the Wings (1994)
Buddhadev Dasgupta1991-2000ArthouseDramaIndiaLakha comes from a family of bird catchers, but questions the value of catching birds. He, and the older Bhushan, sell their caged birds to the local dealer. Lakha’s wife, Sari, complains that he is not ambitious enough because he cares more for the birds than for her, and she starts meeting Natobar. Kalicharan, a city dealer, suggests they sell their birds directly to him. So Bhushan and Lakha take their next catch of birds on the train to Calcutta. Kalicharan invites them to a feast for the ceremony of the birds, with disastrous consequences.Read More »
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Satyajit Ray – Ganashatru AKA An Enemy of the People (1989)
1981-1990DramaIndiaPoliticsSatyajit Ray

Quote:
In Satyajit Ray’s absorbing contemporary adaptation of a play by Henrik Ibsen, a good-hearted doctor discovers that the serious illness befalling the citizens of his small Bengali town may be due to a contamination of the holy water at the local temple. His findings are met not with public gratitude but with rancor, as well as opposition from local authorities, who are afraid the news will keep visitors away. Stately in style but with a fiery debate at its heart, An Enemy of the People gets at the tension between religion and science in everyday Indian life.Read More » -
Satyajit Ray – Pratidwandi aka The Adversary (1970)
1961-1970ClassicsDramaIndiaSatyajit RaySiddhartha Chowdhury, a brilliant medical student, is forced to leave his studies after his father’s sudden demise. He is forced to navigate the high unemployment rate and the communist socio-political climate of 1960s Calcutta in search of a job.Read More »
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Satyajit Ray – Jana Aranya AKA The Middleman (1975)
1971-1980DramaIndiaSatyajit RayA bright and idealistic young man steels himself for the dog-eat-dog business world, only to flounder in a job market packed with thousands of other hopefuls.Read More »
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Prantik Narayan Basu – Bela (2021)
2021-2030ArthouseDocumentaryIndiaPrantik Narayan BasuArt, ritual and labour constitute a continuous choreography of daily life in a village in eastern India.Read More »
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Satyajit Ray – Ashani Sanket aka Distant Thunder (1973)
Satyajit Ray1971-1980DramaIndia

The film is set in a village in the Indian province of Bengal during World War II, and examines the effect of the Great Famine of 1943 on the villages of Bengal through the eyes of a young Brahmin doctor-teacher, Gangacharan, and his wife, Ananga.Read More »
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Ashish Avikunthak – Nirakar Chhaya AKA Shadows Formless (2007)
2001-2010Ashish AvikunthakDramaIndiaA film trapped between two monologues. A lonely and abandoned wife’s fantasy comes to life when the paramour she invokes springs forth and transforms her reality. Shadows Formless is an interpretation of the Malayalam novella Pandavpuram by the distinguished novelist Setumadhavan from Kerala.Read More »
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Mostofa Sarwar Farooki – Television (2012)
2011-2020BangladeshDramaMostofa Sarwar FarookiAs a leader of the local community, Chairman Amin bans every kind of image in his water-locked village in rural Bangladesh. He even goes on to claim that imagination is also sinful since it gives one the license to infiltrate into any prohibited territory. But change is a desperate wind that is difficult to resist by shutting the window. The tension between this traditional window and modern wind grows to such an extent that it starts to leave a ripple effect on the lives of a group of typically colorful, eccentric, and emotional people living in that village. But at the very end of the film, Television, which he hated so much, comes to the rescue and helps Chairman Amin reach a transcendental state where he and his God are unified. A new twist to the story makes him embrace IMAGE and IMAGINATIONRead More »






