Director’s choice
For long years, the rest of India and the Western world identified Bengali cinema with either the pain and poverty of Satyajit Ray's pathbreaking Pather Panchall or with the strong political celluloid dramas of Mrinal Sen and Ritwick Ghatak. Not without reason too, given the themes that permeated films of that generation (even though it ignores the fact that most of Ray's films did not deal with poverty). But with the changing socio-political situation of West Bengal, as also in the rest of India, by the 1990s the audience had begun to move away from topics of social discontent. Their concerns now had more to do with the onslaught of a consumerist society, and to represent this angst, a new brand of avante garde Bengali filmmakers zoomed into the scene.
The turning point may have come in 1994 with Unishe April. Bengali moviegoers, fed up with the diet of 'intellectualese' in the 'art movies', and weary of the shoddy tales in the 'commercial' ones, suddenly discovered in former adman Rituparno Ghosh a director capable of representing the society they lived in. Themes of feminism, male chauvinism, modernity and consumerism, all find play in his movies. Unishe April was breaking new ground in its exploration of the love-hate relationship between a celebrity single mother and her misunderstood daughter through events on the death anniversary of the girl's father.