Soumitra
Chatterjee, Waheeda Rehman, Rabi Ghosh
Abhijan was director Satyajit
Ray's most popular film in Bengal: a "conscious" effort
to communicate with a wider audience. The project was originally
conceived by his friends and Ray stepped in when they panicked at
the prospect of directing. Ray's mastery turned a starkly conventional
plot into a subtly nuanced story which topped the Bengali box office
for months.
Set on the Bihar-Bengal border, where Marwari businessmen — a powerful
Hindi-dialect community of entrepreneurs much disliked throughout
India — and Rajputs of warrior caste (from Rajasthan) have both
settled. The central character of Narsingh (Soumitra Chatterjee),
is a disillusioned, frequently drunken Rajput reduced in status
to an ill-educated taxi driver. Proud and hot-tempered, with a passion
for his 1930s Chrysler, Narsingh is offered work transporting tins
of ghee for Sukhanram, a shady merchant, and finds himself drawn
against his better judgement into trafficking opium. Having failed
in everything honest, he has to decide whether or not he will engage
in criminal activity to make money.
Starring Waheeda Rehman – one of the greatest stars of Bollywood
cinema – as Gulabi, a prostitute; Rabi Ghosh as Rama, Narsingh's
right-hand man; and Ruma Guha Thakurata as Neeli, Abhijan was honoured
with the National Award of India in 1962. The Masters of Cinema
Series is proud to present Abhijan for the first time on DVD in
the West, restored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences'
Academy Film Archive. |