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The Home and the World

Original title: Ghare-Baire
  • 1984
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2K
YOUR RATING
The Home and the World (1984)
Drama

A landowner's wife emerges from seclusion through education, defying social norms. Her newfound freedom leads to political awakening when her husband's old friend brings revolutionary ideas ... Read allA landowner's wife emerges from seclusion through education, defying social norms. Her newfound freedom leads to political awakening when her husband's old friend brings revolutionary ideas to their door.A landowner's wife emerges from seclusion through education, defying social norms. Her newfound freedom leads to political awakening when her husband's old friend brings revolutionary ideas to their door.

  • Director
    • Satyajit Ray
  • Writers
    • Satyajit Ray
    • Rabindranath Tagore
  • Stars
    • Soumitra Chatterjee
    • Victor Banerjee
    • Swatilekha Sengupta
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Satyajit Ray
    • Writers
      • Satyajit Ray
      • Rabindranath Tagore
    • Stars
      • Soumitra Chatterjee
      • Victor Banerjee
      • Swatilekha Sengupta
    • 13User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos7

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    Top cast24

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    Soumitra Chatterjee
    Soumitra Chatterjee
    • Sandip Mukherjee
    • (as Soumitra Chattopadhyay)
    Victor Banerjee
    Victor Banerjee
    • Nikhilesh Choudhury
    Swatilekha Sengupta
    • Bimala Choudhury
    • (as Swatilekha Chattopadhyay)
    Gopa Aich
    • The sister-in-law
    Jennifer Kendal
    Jennifer Kendal
    • Miss Gilby
    • (as Jennifer Kapoor)
    Manoj Mitra
    Manoj Mitra
    • Headmaster
    Bimala Chatterjee
    • Kulada
    • (as Bimal Chattopadhyay)
    Indrapramit Roy
    • Amulya
    Rasik Banerjee
    Haradhan Basu
      Shashanka Bhattacharya
      Malati Bol
      Debnath Bose
      Govinda Chakravarti
      Arup Pal Chowdhury
      Shekhar Das
      Subal Das
      Narayan Dutta
      • Director
        • Satyajit Ray
      • Writers
        • Satyajit Ray
        • Rabindranath Tagore
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews13

      7.51.9K
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      Featured reviews

      Chrysanthepop

      A Breathtaking Story about a Woman's (mis)understanding of Love and Politics

      One doesn't expect anything other than excellence from the legendary Ray's work and 'Ghare Baire' (Home and the World) follows the same path. 'Based on the Nobel prize winner, Ranbindronath Tagore's novel, it focuses on the relationship of a woman with her husband and his best friend. Almost 10 years into her marriage, she is happy with her husband but craves for something more. Unlike many women of the time, her husband gives her complete freedom allowing her to live her life the way she wills. He himself is impressed by the British lifestyle and his his wife learn English. He's also very connected to his own Bengali route. Then enters his revolutionary and stubborn friend who is obsessed of having the country get rid of everything English. The husband and his friend have contradictory viewpoints. Yet, he welcomes his friend and never objects to his motivations, as long as he's within his limits. The wife is impressed and intrigued by his friend's political ambitions and is gradually drawn towards him (or he draws her towards him) until they embark in an affair and then the truth becomes more apparent...to everyone, but it's too late.

      Ray really takes his time to tell us the story, to let us get to know the characters and clearly display the relationships between them and explain the political situation. He does one hell of a job doing it. He shows the development of the wife's 'relationship' with the friend as her marriage becomes weaker while her husband is hauntingly passive yet trying to understand both his wife and his friend as he is the one who truly loves her and he tries to carry out his social obligations towards his people. We see that the wife learns more about the political dilemmas in the outside world but only from the friend's point of view. Then, as one reviewer, has pointed we are drawn into a web of dilemma's between England and India, modernism and tradition, Hindu and Muslim, rich and poor, men and women, leadership and rabble-rousing, greed and sacrifice, means and ends and love and infatuation.

      Master filmmaker that he is, Ray puts it all together in one of the most remarkable way that it does not deviate from the main plot. Ther performances are superb. Victor Bannerjee gives a very intense but subtle performance. In the end, one realizes that it is his character one feels most for. Contrastingly, though Soumitra Chatterjee is more vocal, he makes full use of his nonverbal language, hinting the character's deceitful intentions. Swatilekha Chatterjee plays a very difficult part with tremendous ease. She completely owns the role. Supporting cast are all very good. Ray also makes adequate use of the background score and the cinematography is wonderful. Watch for the camera angles and movement.

      Truly a mind-blowing film and I always thought that there aren't enough words that can do justice to describe the excellence of Ray's films. I've only made an attempt and I'm still far behind. Just watch it to see what I mean. Only those who appreciate real cinema will understand.
      8raju-47681

      Ghare Baire .. A Movie way ahead of its times

      The movie is played with a flashback, with a womans voice over. She is describing her life and her experiences. She is Bimala, the wife of Nikhilesh, a landlord and ruler of an area in West Bengal. She was married to him at a very early age. Bimala recollects how her husband helped her discover her true self, her dreams , aspirations and how she came to understand the meaning of life and love.

      Nikhilesh(Victor Bannerjee , in a class act) , is Rajababu of a province. His people look upto him , and he is benevolent in his demeanour with them. He marries Bimala , but due to the prevalent child marriage traditions , there is a significant age gap between the two. Nikhilesh encourages his wife to explore a life beyond the mundane. He treats her as an equal rather than a submissive partner. Bimala takes English lessons (Jennifer Kendal Kapoor in a cameo) on Nikhilesh's insistence. Gradually as Nikhilesh encourages her to expand her horizons, she becomes more confident. Then enters Sandeep , a revolutionary and Nikhilesh's good friend. Sandeep and Nikhilesh are contrasting personalities. Nikhilesh is silent to Sandeep's vitriolic temperament. Sandeep talks of high ideals, while Nikhilesh thinks about the ground realities. A wonderful sequence where Sandeep is advocating boycott of English goods, while Nikhilesh differs , saying that the poor traders would be affected the most, not so much the English Saab. Bimala is swayed by Sandeep's idealistic words and admires him. Nikhilesh notices the same, when she doesn't take sides, but doesn't comment. Gradually the chemistry between Bimala and Sandeep increases, and while Nikhilesh is aware of it, he defends his silence to Bimala by saying that how will he come to know how much she values him, unless she does not compare his positives and negatives with anyone else. Suddenly a series of incidents show Bimala, a side of Sandeep , that she had not envisioned. During the course of these events she realises the true meaning of Nikhilesh's words to her , and during 'that' heated discussion which he and Sandeep had. While Nikhilesh is hurt by the change in Bimala's behaviour ,he says not a word. Slowly Bimala comes to know that the love respect admiration that she had read in books, was actually Nikhilesh's feelings towards her. How, he treated her as his equal (which in those days was unheard of), broadened her outlook towards life as a whole. Nikhilesh has a heart to heart talk with Bimala ,and drives out to face a riot in the village, while the law catches up with Sandeep. Bimala is left to reminisce all the events, it sums up the movie.
      tieman64

      When Britannia waived the rules

      "Dear me, I had no conception that the lower classes had such white skins." - Lord Curzon

      Set in the early 1900s, Satyajit Ray's "The Home and the World" features the recollections of Bimala Cloudhury (Swatilekha Chatterjee), the wife of Nikhilesh (Victor Banerjee), a wealthy Bengal merchant. As her spouse encourages her to adopt Western attitudes, Bimala begins to drift away from traditional social and religious values.

      By "Home's" second act, it becomes clear that Nikhilesh idolises India's British rulers, who, under the leadership of Lord Curzon, have begun partitioning the Muslim and Hindu populations of Bengal. Ironically, Nikhilesh's desires for Bimala to be "reeducated" have the opposite effect; she's drawn toward a leader of the Swadeshi, a nationalist movement. Indeed, Bimala becomes the movement's first female member.

      "Home" thus sketches an India in which forces have begun pulling in opposing directions. Throughout the film, traditional values vie with liberated modernism. This "modernism", ironically, is introduced via the "primitive" hand of British Imperialism, which is itself opposed by an Indian Nationalism whose progressivism not only masks reactionary elements, but points to the eventual disharmony between Hindus and Muslims.

      Slow, subtle, and set almost entirely indoors, "The Home and the World" heavily resembles the works of Luchuno Visconti. Like Visconti at his best, Ray's film portrays a society on the cusp of transformation. Bimala's plight, torn between two men, itself echoes the upheaval's of her nation.

      8/10 – See "North West Frontier".
      10pritambanerjee999

      Study the Great Indian Debate: Gandhi vs Tagore

      Read about the great Indian debate between Gandhi and Tagore before watching this movie. You can see Gandhi in the character of Sandip and Tagore in the character of Nikhil. Now watch this movie. An absolute masterpiece
      10debgangulian

      A masterpiece!

      I have literally no words to describe this film! Throughout the film, I felt that I was transported back to the early 20th century and watching the events unfold in front of my eyes.

      Bimala, the wife of a Bengali zamindar/gentry is the main protagonist of the film. Her conflicts, her transformations (no spoilers) are the main events occuring in the film. To enjoy the flavour of the film, I would suggest you to watch the film from the POV of her.

      The film illustrates the two sides of the Swadeshi movement. One group felt that Swadeshi movement was unrealistic and the poor would be hard hit. Another group, the utopian one, felt that Swadeshi would bring freedom to India.

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      Related interests

      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Based on the book "Ghare-Baire" by Rabindranath Tagore. Director Satyajit Ray had previously written a screenplay from this book, but had sold the rights to a group who never filmed the story. 30 years later, Ray rewrote the screenplay for this film.
      • Connections
        Referenced in Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession (2004)

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      FAQ16

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • June 21, 1985 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • India
      • Languages
        • Bengali
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Das Heim und die Welt
      • Filming locations
        • Tollygunj, Kolkata, India(Studio Set)
      • Production company
        • National Film Development Corporation of India (NFDC)
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Gross worldwide
        • $6,951
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 2h 20m(140 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono

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