Coincidentally, my inclusion of Anjan Dutt's Chaalchitra Ekhon, which I saw at its Kolkata International Film Festival premiere, in the World Poll of the best films of the year conducted by the reputed Australia-based film magazine Senses of Cinema became a meagre gift to the great filmmaker on his birthday, as they published it today on their website. His 2009 film, Madly Bangalee, is also on this list as one of the best older films I watched for the first time last year.
Chaalchitra
Ekhon was a transformative experience for me, someone
whose journey into cinema and cinephilia began with Mrinal Sen's Padatik. For
quite some time, I've felt nothing but disillusionment in the direction Bangla
cinema is headed; I started feeling there's nothing left to cinematically
explore in this city, and films like those by Mrinal Sen, or the Calcutta
Trilogy of Satyajit Ray can no longer be made. Now, all that's left in this
godforsaken city is capitalist and political propaganda on hoardings and
posters. Dutt's film broke my (dis)illusion. Working with different mediums
like cinema, DSLR, and iPhone cameras, Dutt proved that Sen or Ray could still
make films about this city if they were alive today with the same raw energy.
The city is not dead. Sen could still get to the streets, film in the busiest
of locations, and tell authentic urban tales, perhaps more comfortably owing to
the advancement in digital technology.
And
then, there's his music in both these films. I await the release of Dutt's
tribute song to Sen from Chaalchitra Ekhon, the song that kept me
standing and clapping with tears when everyone was walking out after the
screening ended. I was first introduced to Anjan Dutt through his music when I
was young. As a child, I was restricted from going out of my house, so I would
sit and gaze at the pedestrians walking by, at birds, cats, dogs, and mice.
Later, when I first Dutt's Aamar Janala (on Tara TV, if I
remember correctly?), I was reminded of those days looking out of my window as
a kid. Dutt's discography is vast and diverse; I can't write even about all of
my favourite songs because of how overwhelming their impact has been on me. The music of Madly
Bangalee did not just sound good, it wonderfully captured
the inner lives of these troubled youngsters as well as the elderly character
played by Dutt himself.
Happiest Birthday Anjan Dutt!