Filmworld
No need to replicate 'Pather Panchali': Sharmila Tagore
Kolkata, Aug 30
Veteran actress Sharmila
Tagore, who was introduced in films by legendary storyteller Satyajit
Ray in "Apur Sansar" in 1959, believes there is no need to replicate the
maestro's films.
Sharmila was a 13-year-old schoolgoer when she
was cast opposite Soumitra Chatterjee in "Apur Sansar", the final film
of the Apu trilogy.
"Pather Panchali" was the first film in the much lauded trilogy and was Ray's directorial debut.
"Why
should we make films like 'Pather Panchali'? It inspired scores of
people and the parallel movement of Shyam Benegal started because of
that, so it has reached many many... why should we replicate it,"
Sharmila posed the query in response to a question by an audience member
at a discussion on the 60th anniversary of the film.
Filmmaker
Aparna Sen, who debuted as an actress in Ray's 1961 film "Teen Kanya"
(Three Daughters), supported Sharmila's point of view and averred that
one must make a "conscious" choice not to be imitative.
"In fact, we should make a conscious effort, since we have inherited him, to not to be imitative," Aparna said.
Sharmila added that the path-breaking film "was a product of a certain era and that era has gone".
"So I don't think young people would be interested (in making it)," Sharmila said.
Based
on Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay's 1929 Bengali novel of the same name,
it is widely regarded as the first film from independent India that put
the nation on the world map.
It won India's National Film Award
for Best Feature Film in 1955, the Best Human Document award at the 1956
Cannes International Film Festival, and several other awards,
establishing Ray as one of the country's most distinguished filmmakers.
The discussion was organised by Society for the Preservation of Satyajit Ray Archives.