-
Friday, May 18, 2001
The Cloud-Capped Star
Ghatak's most passionate subject-the disintegration of life for Bengali refugees-is at the core of The Cloud-Capped Star, but the film resonates with universally Indian themes, such as the "powerful mother image, in both its benevolent and terrible aspects." (Ghatak) The story focuses on the seemingly indomitable Nita, who sacrifices everything as the sole physical and moral support for her refugee family: a brother with musical ambitions, a father whose classical education counts for nothing, and a mother who cynically manipulates her daughter's demise. Ghatak himself manipulates the melodrama for a dark family portrait whose many levels of meaning are reflected in Supriya Choudhury's "luminous performance," as critic J. Hoberman notes: "The film rises and falls on her private, inward smile, sudden turns toward or away from the camera. It gradually becomes clear, however, that the clouds which conceal Nita's radiance also prevent her from seeing the world....A film of broad characterizations and Chekhovian nuance...as formally exciting as it is emotionally absorbing."
This page may by only partially complete.