MRINAL SEN(14 May 1923, 30 December 2018)
Noted Bengali filmmaker Mrinal Sen passed away on Sunday,30, Dec 2018 at 10:30 am. He was 95. Sen was one of the forerunners of parallel cinema in India. Along with his contemporaries Satyajit Ray and Riwik Ghatak, Sen changed the face of Bengali film in a big way.
Noted Bengali filmmaker Mrinal Sen passed away on Sunday,30, Dec 2018 at 10:30 am. He was 95. Sen was one of the forerunners of parallel cinema in India. Along with his contemporaries Satyajit Ray and Riwik Ghatak, Sen changed the face of Bengali film in a big way.
Mrinal
Sen made his directorial debut with the 1955 movie Raat Bhore, and went on to
helm films like Bhuvan Shome, Chorus, Calcutta 71, Kharij, Mrigaya and
Akaler Sandhane among others. Sen had received 18 National Awards.
Mrinal
Sen was born on May 14, 1923, in the town of Faridpur, now in Bangladesh. After
finishing his high school there, he left home to come to Calcutta for studying
physics. During his student days, he got involved with the cultural wing of the
Communist party. Though he never became a member of the party, his association
with the Indian Peoples Theatre Association brought him close to a number of
like-minded cultural people.
His
interest in films started after he stumbled upon a book on film aesthetics.
However his interest remained mostly intellectual, and he was forced to take up
a job of a medical representative, which took him away from Calcutta. This did
not last very long, and he came back to the city and eventually took a job of
an audio technician in a Calcutta film studio, which was the beginning of his
film carrier.
Mrinal
Sen made his first feature film in 1953, which he soon tried to forget. His
next film, Neel Akasher Nichey (Under the Blue Sky), earned him local
recognition, while his third film, Baishey Shravan (Wedding Day) was
his first film that gave him international exposure.
After
making five more films, he made a film with a shoe-string budget provided by
the government of India. This film, Bhuvan Shome (Mr. Shome),
finally launched him as a major filmmaker, both nationally and
internationally. Bhuvan Shome also initiated the “New Cinema”
film movement in India.
His next
few films were overtly political, and earned him the reputation as a Marxist
artist. This was also the time of large-scale political unrest throughout
India, particularly in and around Calcutta. This phase was immediately followed
by a series of films where he shifted his focus, and instead of looking for
enemies outside, he looked for the enemy within his own middle-class society.
This was arguably his most creative phase and won him a large number of international
awards.
Mrinal
Sen never stopped experimenting with his medium. In his later films he tried to
move away from the narrative structure and worked with very thin story lines.
After a long gap of eight years, at the age of eighty, he made his latest film, Aamar
Bhuban, in 2003.
During
his career, Mrinal Sen’s film have received awards from almost all major film
festivals, including Cannes, Berlin, Venice, Moscow, Karlovy Vary, Montreal,
Chicago, and Cairo. Retrospectives of his films have been shown in almost all
major cities of the world.
Apart
from his films, he has also received a number of personal honors. He
received the Padma Bhushan, and in 2005 he was awarded the Dadasaheb Phalke
Award, the highest honor given to an Indian filmmaker, by the Government of
India. He was also an honorary Member of the Indian Parliament from 1998 to
2003.
The
French government awarded him the Commandeur de l'ordre des Arts et letters
(Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters), the highest honor conferred by
the country.
In 2001
The Russian government honored him with the Order of Friendship. He has also
received a number of honorary Doctorate degrees from various universities.
Mrinal
Sen was the president of the International Federation of the Film Societies. He
also served as member of International Jury at various film festivals,
including Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Moscow, Karlovy vary, Tokyo, Tehran,
Mannheim, Nyon, Chicago, Ghent, Tunis, and Oberhausen.
In 2004
Mrinal Sen completed his autobiographical book, Always Being Born.
In 2008 Mrinal Sen was awarded Lifetime Achievement awards by
Osian's-Cinefan Festival and by the International Film Festival in India. In
2009 the International Film Festival of Kerala awarded their first Lifetime
Achievement Award to him.
Deep
Condolences.