Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne

Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne
Release Date:8 May 1969
Director :Satyajit Ray
Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne is a 1969 Indian
fantasy adventure comedy film written and
directed by Satyajit Ray and based on a story
by his grandfather Upendrakishore Ray
Chowdhury. It is a fantasy-musical film, with
the music and lyrics written by Ray himself.
This is the first film of the Goopy Gyne Bagha
Byne series.
The film was based on the characters Goopy
Gyne and Bagha Byne.The movie ran for 51
straight weeks.lt won the Best Feature Film
and Best Direction awards at the 16th
National Film Awards, and went on to win
many other international awards as well.
Critical reception was highly positive.
The story revolves around Gopinath Gyne
alias Goopy.(Tapen Chatterjee), the son of a
poor grocer Kanu Kyne from a village called
Amloki. Goopy wants to become a singer but
unfortunately, he sings terribly without
melody, rhythm or tune. Goopy does so and
is driven out of Amloki on a donkey for
waking up the king with his terrible singing
Exiled into a forest, he meets Bagha
Bayen(Rabi Ghosh), another exile from
nearby village Hortuki. Bagha has been exiled
for playing the drum badly. They soon make
a team after encountering a tiger and start
singing and drumming, initially to scare offF
the tiger, but in the process attract a group of
ghosts who are fascinated by their music.
The pair travel to Shundi, where a benevolent
king appoints them court musicians.
However, the king of Halla (the long lost twin
brother of the king of Shundi and both played
by (Santosh Dutta), is planning to attack
Shundi, after being poisoned by his chief
minister (Jahor Roy) with the help of a magic
potion that makes him evil. He is aided by a
senile sorcerer(Harindranath
Chattopadhyay),who recipes that evil potion
and also the potion that has made all the
Shundi people mute.Goopy and Bagha travel
to Halla in an attempt to prevent the attack,
but are captured instead. They also lose their
slippers when captured and hence cannot
escape the jail by magic, but manage to do
so by strategy of luring the famished
gatekeeper (Nripati Chatterjee) with delicious
foods. Next, they wish for unlimited food and
sweets which rain from the sky on the
starving soldiers who forget the battle and
settle for filling the bellies. Not only this, their
evil effects of the
singing takes
potion
given to the King of Halla, who drops the idea
of capturing Shundi, and reunites happily
with his brother. For averting the war, the two
kings of Shundi and Halla respectively marry
their daughters to Goopy and Bagha.

Pather Panchali

Pather Panchali
Release Date: 26 August 1955
Director: Satyajit Ray
“Pather Panchali” is Satyajit Ray’s debut film
about life in a Bengali village. It was the first
movie of Satyajit Ray. It is an affecting story
of a rural family struggling to deal with
poverty and tragedy in their home. Ray
adapted the script from Bibhuti Bihushaw
Banerjee’s semi-autobiographical novel of
the same title and retells it with natural
beauty and a quiet perspective. The
filmmaker, a simple and direct approach to
making this movie. Ray created ordinary
scenes that were incredibly life-like. His films
contained very few strains of artifice. He
believed that the raw material of cinema was
life itself. Ray generally concentrated on
small subjects and ordinary people. He
favored using non-actors and shooting on
location to heighten the realism. He made
films in his own style, dignified, sincere and
with a conscience. In “Pather Panchali”
(Song of the Little Road) Ray makes superb
use of his milieu. The viewer immediately
feels the cramped conditions of the families’
decaying house and the open-air confines of
the surrounding forest. Rays’ was a cinema
of thought and feeling, in which emotion was
deliberately restrained because it is so
strong. This restraint adds to the
psychological intensity in his work. Nearly all
of his films are marked by this remarkable
depth of feeling. “Pather Panchali”, the first
installment of the Apu Trilogy (‘Aparajito”
and “The World of Apu” would follow) depicts
a young boy (Apu) exploring his ever-
expanding universe with a growing sense of
wonder. Ray excelled at showing how
children and adolescents confront mystery
and joy; sadness and death. The director
shows Apu’s burgeoning awareness witha
masterful use of the long shot. High-angled,
distant shots track Apu and his older sister
Durga, as they run spiritedly through white-
kashed fields. This sense of discovery gives
the frilm it’s emotional power. The director’s
main subject was India-it’s customs and
culture. It’s conflicts between the traditional
way of life. He tried arduously to capture this
synthesis between western ideas and
traditional Hindu values. His concern for
human problems and not issues of national
politics gave his films universal appeal.
“Pather Panchali” delineates the small joys
and acute sorrows of a poor Indian family. t
does not nullify love. It would be difficult to
imagine “Pather Panchali” without it’s
memorable score. Satyajit Ray was an
unpretentious filmmaker. His films were life-
affirming, authentic and honest; gentle and
poetic-truthful observations on human
behavior that employed simple but strong
themes. Ray’s unadorned style of film-
making was intimate, probing, and revealing.
The final scene shows the grieving family
leaving their home in an ox-driven carriage to
begin a new life. A trailing camera in medium
close-up captures a compelling mixture of
emotions on their faces. Expressions of pain
and resolution; hope and despair, the future
and the past. A seemingly simple yet
unmistakably powerful scene that typifies
Satyajit Ray’s profound cinema. A cinema of
gentle but deep observation, understanding
and unabashed love of the human race.