Film Review
The economic boom that followed the end of the Second World War was to
provide the stimulus for one of the greatest social upheavals of the 1950s,
the movement towards gender equality. This was not confined to
the West, as this film from acclaimed Indian filmmaker Satyajit Ray
testifies.
Mahanagar
(a.k.a.
The Big City in that
in that ) shows that female empowerment, driven by economic necessity,
was as much a phenomenon in India as it was in other modern capitalist
democracies across the world. However, India was different
in that the prevailing gender roles were far more rigidly delineated
than was generally the case in the West, and so the mismatch between
one's personal aspirations and
one's expected role in society was much more pronounced, as this film
powerfully demonstrates.
Mahanagar is concerned with a
young married woman who, through financial need, is driven to find paid
work. She has an uphill struggle trying to overcome her own low
self-esteem and the traditional notions of a woman's place in society,
but ultimately she wins the self-confidence and economic independence
that set her free and allow her to live a fulfilled life, as a woman, a
wife and a mother. Her ordeal not only enriches her own life, but
she emerges stronger, and better equipped to deal with future
calamities, in contrast to her husband, who is unable to rise to his
feet when Fate lands him an unexpected punch.
Director Satyajit Ray based the film on a short story by Narendranath
Mitra and was clearly influenced by the Italian neo-realists (notably
Vittorio De Sica) in crafting the film's striking visual design, which
emphasises the massive gulf that existed between the lower and upper middle classes
in India in the 1950s. Whilst it may lack the searing poetic
touch of many of Ray's other films,
Mahanagar
does have a near-documentary feel which imbues the story with a harrowing
reality, and which the film's superlative performances can only
accentuate. Still very highly regarded today, this film won Ray
the Silver Bear for the Best Director at the Berlin Film Festival in
1964.
Heading an impeccable cast is Madhabi Mukherjee, who plays the main
female character (Arati) with such subtlety and conviction that much of
her dialogue appears superfluous. Most of what Mukherjee has to
say she says not with her mouth but with her carefully controlled facial expressions,
particularly her extraordinary expressive eyes. Mukherjee would
give an equally outstanding performance in Ray's next film,
Charulata
(1964), although the two would then only work together on
one further film,
Kapurush
(1965). Playing Mukherjee's sister in this film is Jaya Bhaduri,
who would go on to become a major star of Bollywood.
Gender equality remains a hot topic more than a century after this film
was made, and so it continues to have a profound resonance. But
there are other themes
which
a spectator can latch onto.
Mahanagar is almost as much a
critique of capitalism as it is of gender equality in post-Independence Indian
society. It is the need to make money that is responsible for the
erosion of the old values, compelling the wife to overcome the
social and psychological barriers to earn an essential family
income. Ironically, it is this same commercial imperative that
eventually leads to tensions of a different kind, when Arati is forced
to choose between economic well-being and her own moral
principles. In the end, Arati surprises us by showing that she is
a slave neither to convention nor to capitalism, that she
is a truly liberated woman.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Satyajit Ray film:
Charulata (1964)
Film Synopsis
In 1950s Calcutta, Subrata Mazumdar is a bank employee who earns barely
enough to support his family. As well as his wife Arati and his
young son, Subrata must provide for his sister-in-law and his two
elderly parents, who live with him in his cramped city apartment.
With little encouragement from her husband, Arati applies for a
position as a door-to-door sales girl and, to her surprise, gets the
job. Although she is at first apprehensive, Arati soon begins to
enjoy her work and relishes her new-found independence. Her
stepfather, a retired schoolmaster, resents what he feels is a betrayal
of traditional values and refuses to take money from Arati, preferring
instead to extort favours from his former pupils. In time,
Subrata also becomes uncomfortable about his wife having to work for a
living, so he persuades her to give up her job and devote her time to the
family. Just before Arati hands in her resignation, disaster
strikes. The bank her husband works for has just collapsed,
leaving her the family's sole breadwinner...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.