Ritwik Ghatak's small group of films...can be accounted among the most lively, committed and passionate to be made in postwar India.-Derek Malcolm, Sight & SoundThis month we are pleased to be able to present five features by Ritwik Ghatak, an artist who exerted a profound influence on the modern Indian cinema but who was critically recognized abroad only after his untimely death in 1975. (His eight films are still not available commercially in this country.) A native of East Bengal, Ghatak was shattered by the partition of that "orphan state" (later to become Bangladesh), and his stories and images are permeated with the personal urgency he felt for the people whose lives and culture were irreparably ruptured. Yet his films also have a vital, regenerative power, fed by the artist's insatiable intelligence (he was a committed Marxist and lay Jungian), and his skillful integration of popular forms of culture-melodrama, songs, and dance-into politically radical themes. His major influence was Eisenstein, and he said, "I have wanted to use the cinema as a weapon." But if he shocks, he does so with photography that is thought made visible, editing that turns melodrama into a form of music, and music that tells its own bold and surprising story. Through his films and his short tenure at the Film Institute in Pune, Ghatak influenced a generation of filmmakers including Kumar Shahani, Mani Kaul, Ketan Mehta, and Adoor Gopalakrishnan-names that today are synonymous with the Indian art film. Ghatak was a complex man who was much loved by his students but was viewed by the film establishment as an eccentric iconoclast; he died a chronic alcoholic at the age of 49.All prints from BFI Collections. Special thanks to the Ritwik Ghatak Memorial Trust. Tour organized by Brent Kliewer.