Kapurush
- 1965
- 1h 10m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,6/10
2,7 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA chance meeting rekindles old memories between a screenwriter and his ex-girlfriend, who is by now married to a well-to-do man.A chance meeting rekindles old memories between a screenwriter and his ex-girlfriend, who is by now married to a well-to-do man.A chance meeting rekindles old memories between a screenwriter and his ex-girlfriend, who is by now married to a well-to-do man.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Vedettes
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
Soumitra Chatterjee
- Amitabha Roy
- (as Soumitra Chattopadhyay)
Madhavi Mukherjee
- Karuna Gupta
- (as Madhabi Mukhopadhyay)
Haradhan Bannerjee
- Bimal Gupta
- (as Haradhan Bandyopadhyay)
7,62.6K
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Avis en vedette
This film is a slow burn that delicately navigates regret.
This is the story about regretting one's past life choices. Amitabha Roy is traveling from Calcutta to the country to visit his brother-in-law and to write, he's a tv screenwriter. Along the way he has car trouble and while at the mechanic's a friendly and rather round tea plantation owner named Bimal Gupta, insists on hosting him at his home while his car is being prepared.
"You want shelter and I want company."-Bimal
"You won't believe this but we get on average less than one Bengali in distress per year."-Bimal
They have a congenial drive in the rain to Bimal's plantation where Amitabha meets Bimal's wife who is none other than his ex-girlfriend Karuna. The two don't say anything to Bimal about knowing one another and have to endure an evening of Bimal pushing smokes and alcohol on Amitabha while Karuna knits quietly by the fire.
We see the end of their (Amitabha and Karuna's) relationship in a flashback. Then Amitabha asks Karuna if she is happy in her marriage. He tells her he must know, he never got married and he never could ask her forgiveness...he told her that everything seemed so pointless and Calcutta so boring.
"There's just one thing I couldn't do, fall in love again."-Amitabha "I didn't have the courage then, but now I do. Leave him...and come with me."
"You think you know my husband after one day? You don't know him."-Karuna
The next day is probably my favorite section of the film as Bimal and Karuna take Amitabha for a tour and picnic via their Jeep. It's the most visually appealing part of the film...and emotionally it adds to the ache as you can feel Amitabha's pain and regret and you can just about hear his what if.
While not my first Indian film by any means, it was only my second Satyajit Ray film as I had seen his film Devi (The Godess) previously. Like Devi, there is wonderful cinematography in this film and I enjoyed the slow moments...especially those that focused on facial expressions. Beautiful film that expresses ache and regret in such a straightforward way. I feel like it is an excellent cautionary tale.
"You want shelter and I want company."-Bimal
"You won't believe this but we get on average less than one Bengali in distress per year."-Bimal
They have a congenial drive in the rain to Bimal's plantation where Amitabha meets Bimal's wife who is none other than his ex-girlfriend Karuna. The two don't say anything to Bimal about knowing one another and have to endure an evening of Bimal pushing smokes and alcohol on Amitabha while Karuna knits quietly by the fire.
We see the end of their (Amitabha and Karuna's) relationship in a flashback. Then Amitabha asks Karuna if she is happy in her marriage. He tells her he must know, he never got married and he never could ask her forgiveness...he told her that everything seemed so pointless and Calcutta so boring.
"There's just one thing I couldn't do, fall in love again."-Amitabha "I didn't have the courage then, but now I do. Leave him...and come with me."
"You think you know my husband after one day? You don't know him."-Karuna
The next day is probably my favorite section of the film as Bimal and Karuna take Amitabha for a tour and picnic via their Jeep. It's the most visually appealing part of the film...and emotionally it adds to the ache as you can feel Amitabha's pain and regret and you can just about hear his what if.
While not my first Indian film by any means, it was only my second Satyajit Ray film as I had seen his film Devi (The Godess) previously. Like Devi, there is wonderful cinematography in this film and I enjoyed the slow moments...especially those that focused on facial expressions. Beautiful film that expresses ache and regret in such a straightforward way. I feel like it is an excellent cautionary tale.
'Minor' but only in scale.
This Satyajit Ray movie, made in 1965, is virtually unknown here and while it's not one of his great masterpieces it is very fine and well worth seeing. "The Coward" is very much a chamber piece with really only three main speaking parts. The great Soumitra Chatterjee is Amitabha Roy, the screenwriter who finds himself stranded in a remote backwater after his car breaks down. He is 'rescued' by a friendly plantation owner, (Haradhan Bannerjee),, who invites him home for the evening but when he gets there he discovers the plantation owner's wife, (the equally great Madhavi Mukherjee), is his old love he let go years before. He still carries a torch for her but she seems indifferent to him.
Is Chatterjee the coward of the title for not committing himself to Mukherjee when he had the chance or is she the coward, unable or unwilling to face up to her feelings in the present? In just seventy minutes Ray presents us with a devastating character study as he peels away layers from each of the three protagonists revealing the feelings and the frustrations beneath. (He's also not afraid to tackle issues like colonialism and the caste system). In the grand scheme of things this may be 'minor' Ray and yet it is a film that will stay in your memory long after it's over.
Is Chatterjee the coward of the title for not committing himself to Mukherjee when he had the chance or is she the coward, unable or unwilling to face up to her feelings in the present? In just seventy minutes Ray presents us with a devastating character study as he peels away layers from each of the three protagonists revealing the feelings and the frustrations beneath. (He's also not afraid to tackle issues like colonialism and the caste system). In the grand scheme of things this may be 'minor' Ray and yet it is a film that will stay in your memory long after it's over.
Another character examination study film from Satyajit Ray
(1965) The Coward/ Kapurush
(In Bengali with English subtitles)
DRAMA
Adapted from the short story ""Janaiko Kapurusher Kahini" by Premendra Mitra music, co-written and directed by Satyajit Ray that tells about an inspiring screenwriter, Soumitra Chattopadhyay as Amitabha Roy (also known as the Coward) by chance meeting an ex-former flame, Karuna (Madhabi Mukhopadhyay), and he continues to pursue for her affections despite her already married with an already successful owner Bimal Gupta (Haradhan Bandyopadhyay). Throughout the entire movie, viewers get to witness flashbacks how the two first met and what drove them apart.
It is not just a movie about a young man vying affections for a former flame, for it is also about class, culture and principle. I love the civil discussions that does not involve murder. This is the sixth of fourteen films actor Soumitra Chatterjee collaborated with writer/ director Satyajit Ray.
Adapted from the short story ""Janaiko Kapurusher Kahini" by Premendra Mitra music, co-written and directed by Satyajit Ray that tells about an inspiring screenwriter, Soumitra Chattopadhyay as Amitabha Roy (also known as the Coward) by chance meeting an ex-former flame, Karuna (Madhabi Mukhopadhyay), and he continues to pursue for her affections despite her already married with an already successful owner Bimal Gupta (Haradhan Bandyopadhyay). Throughout the entire movie, viewers get to witness flashbacks how the two first met and what drove them apart.
It is not just a movie about a young man vying affections for a former flame, for it is also about class, culture and principle. I love the civil discussions that does not involve murder. This is the sixth of fourteen films actor Soumitra Chatterjee collaborated with writer/ director Satyajit Ray.
Wow! What A Coincidence!
Two years after Jean Luc Godard's brilliant "Contempt" ("Le Mepris," 1963), about a feckless screenwriter, who loses his wife to a wealthy and powerful man, Satyajit Ray released his film about a feckless screenwriter, who lost his college girl friend to a wealthy and powerful man. I wonder what these directors have against screenwriters. Could it be that they did not like the scripts they were getting and had to sweat over their own? A car driven by Soumitra Chatterjee breaks down in a remote village and the local garage will have to send away for a part. But it just so happens that a friendly man of substance is in that same garage at that same time and offers the writer the hospitality of his home. The writer agrees and when they reach their destination, it just so happens that the man of substance is married to the writer's college girl friend (Madhavi Mukherjee), who he rejected but never got over. Perhaps a professional screenwriter would be uncomfortable with all these coincidences, but, once accepted, there's much suspense in how this ends.
Satyajit Ray's burning take on incomplete lovestory. A Classic contrary version to his own Masterpiece Charulata.
Kapurush / The Coward (1965) :
Brief Review -
Satyajit Ray's burning take on incomplete lovestory. A Classic contrary version to his own Masterpiece Charulata. You know i often say that Indian Cinema can never have a Masterpiece like Casablanca (1942) but we have Charulata (1964). It was Ray's visionary take on a Woman's Love for the other person than her Husband but the person with high ethics doens't fall for it. That reminds me of Casablanca, you know Rick sending off the couple to stay happy in their married life in the legendary climax scene. Though, Ray's Charulata was differen. But for me that's the only thing from India which i can compare to Casablanca and you know it's a big statment. So, Kapurush is contrary to Charulata or should i say it's a male version of it. A by chance meeting rekindles old memories between a screenwriter and his ex-girlfriend, who is by now married to a well-to-do man. Here, we see the woman having those ethics and showing her loyalty. However, her burning heart and pain does not remain hidden and that's what delivers a Classic heartbreaking climax to this short film. In 67 minutes, Kapurush smartly manages to showcase all the required things including past events. It's an achievement for any film with this much short runtime. Remember those Classic love stories of Hollywood from silent era? Kapurush is that for Indian cinema. I know it's too late, i mean 4 decades, yeah but still at last we have something to tell. Soumitra Chatterjee, Madhabi Mukherjee and Haradhan Bandopadhyay are in their sublime forms in the film. Satyajit Ray's dark theme and extremely earnest framework are the two major highlights of Kapurush. Even though that 'Coward' element seems little udiscovered considering the importance it holds towards the title, the rest of the narrative is nothing short of a Classic Cinematic Experience.
RATING - 8/10*
By - #samthebestest.
Satyajit Ray's burning take on incomplete lovestory. A Classic contrary version to his own Masterpiece Charulata. You know i often say that Indian Cinema can never have a Masterpiece like Casablanca (1942) but we have Charulata (1964). It was Ray's visionary take on a Woman's Love for the other person than her Husband but the person with high ethics doens't fall for it. That reminds me of Casablanca, you know Rick sending off the couple to stay happy in their married life in the legendary climax scene. Though, Ray's Charulata was differen. But for me that's the only thing from India which i can compare to Casablanca and you know it's a big statment. So, Kapurush is contrary to Charulata or should i say it's a male version of it. A by chance meeting rekindles old memories between a screenwriter and his ex-girlfriend, who is by now married to a well-to-do man. Here, we see the woman having those ethics and showing her loyalty. However, her burning heart and pain does not remain hidden and that's what delivers a Classic heartbreaking climax to this short film. In 67 minutes, Kapurush smartly manages to showcase all the required things including past events. It's an achievement for any film with this much short runtime. Remember those Classic love stories of Hollywood from silent era? Kapurush is that for Indian cinema. I know it's too late, i mean 4 decades, yeah but still at last we have something to tell. Soumitra Chatterjee, Madhabi Mukherjee and Haradhan Bandopadhyay are in their sublime forms in the film. Satyajit Ray's dark theme and extremely earnest framework are the two major highlights of Kapurush. Even though that 'Coward' element seems little udiscovered considering the importance it holds towards the title, the rest of the narrative is nothing short of a Classic Cinematic Experience.
RATING - 8/10*
By - #samthebestest.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis film is featured as a bonus on "The Big City", released by the Criterion Collection, spine #668.
- GaffesThe shadow of the boom mic is clearly visible on the wall at the start of the first flash-back scene.
- Citations
Amitabha Roy: All this palm reading was just an excuse to hold your hand.
Karuna Gupta: You think it wasn't an excuse for me to offer it?
- Autres versionsThere is an Italian edition of this film on DVD (Extra Movie in "APARAJITO"), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 10m(70 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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