Potrays a sentimental mother daughter relation. How a female dancer sets her priority and became famous but loses her relationship with her daughter on the way .Potrays a sentimental mother daughter relation. How a female dancer sets her priority and became famous but loses her relationship with her daughter on the way .Potrays a sentimental mother daughter relation. How a female dancer sets her priority and became famous but loses her relationship with her daughter on the way .
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Featured reviews
It's a movie which shows how little resource is needed to make a good movie. Almost the whole movie happens in a house. With only a few actors (only three prominent). It shows the capability of
a talented writter and director "Rituporno Ghosh".
Riruporno Ghosh is a brilliant director. The cinematography and the story are well built. Aparna Sen is awesome in her role.Both the personality of a dancer and the love of a mother are perfectly bloomed in the character of Sarojini. Debashree Roy is just great in the role of Aditi.I am a great fan of her. Her performance in this movie is one of best. The dialogs between mom and daughter are also well built.
The complexity of the relationship between mom and daughter is tremendously picturized.The complexity between Sarojini and her late husband is actually the picture of our society. The jealousy a husband to his famous wife is very common. The same thing in the case of accepting Aditi by her lover as wife because she is a daughter of a dancer.The ending is just perfect.
The complexity of the relationship between mom and daughter is tremendously picturized.The complexity between Sarojini and her late husband is actually the picture of our society. The jealousy a husband to his famous wife is very common. The same thing in the case of accepting Aditi by her lover as wife because she is a daughter of a dancer.The ending is just perfect.
Almost being a good translation of 'Autumn Sonata' by Ingmar Bergman, it gave the space and gateway to Ghosh and really set the mood in front of audiences about what Ghosh is going to make in the coming years. People say that 90's was the darkest time for indian cinema - not only bollywood, but regional ones too - and art filmmakers from every state was trying their hard to make experimental films more communicable and big budgeted movies with more vocal camera, art and editing. Unishe April was one of those torch bearers. Entirely shot in indoor sets, its script give the actors enough screen time and more than enough dialogues. And the actors, mainly the leads - Debashree Roy and Aparna Sen - filled those sets with their acting skills. This style was much unique then and stayed with Ghosh until he moved to the new, more expressive storytelling.
10anjumhaz
Unishe April (Nineteenth April) highlights the complications of a relationship between a famous professional dancer and her daughter. This is one of the best films directed by Rituporno Ghosh during his early career. The acting of the movie was splendid and you would sense the special aroma Rituporno put in his films.
Compared to modern dynamic films, Rituporno uses a static style. He would take much less shots, optmial scenes, but EACH scene will attract the spectator like a magnet, however simple that scene is.
Aparna Sen putting 'tip' on her forehead, receiving phone, family taking dinner together- these very simple yet detailed scenes stay with me after the movie ends. The conversation and complications all were perfect. There wasn't a time when you could pick a side, the mother's or the daughter's, it was so compelling.
It will stay as my all time favorite one!
Compared to modern dynamic films, Rituporno uses a static style. He would take much less shots, optmial scenes, but EACH scene will attract the spectator like a magnet, however simple that scene is.
Aparna Sen putting 'tip' on her forehead, receiving phone, family taking dinner together- these very simple yet detailed scenes stay with me after the movie ends. The conversation and complications all were perfect. There wasn't a time when you could pick a side, the mother's or the daughter's, it was so compelling.
It will stay as my all time favorite one!
Unishe April (1994):
Brief Review -
Huge fan of Autumn Sonata (1978), but this wasn't close. Rituparno Ghosh-what a genius filmmaker, and I have no second thoughts about it. This was just his second film, yet he impressed so many critics as well as the National Award juries. If someone called him India's Ingmar Bergman, then I wouldn't have minded, because he came so close to cracking similar themes of storytelling. Autumn Sonata, one of Bergman's last films, was a conversational classic and carried a very experimental narrative for its time. It explored strained relationships through complex theories, leaving viewers stunned with the director's vision. Ghosh's Unishe April is a sort of remake of that film, with of course a few changes suiting Indian traditions and social norms. Unlike Bergman's flick, which had several other supporting characters playing pivotal roles in the narrative, Unishe April mainly focuses on the mother-daughter's strained relationship and scattered bond. It becomes too personal and lacks an intricate structure in its narrative, thereby distancing itself from the Swedish film. That's actually the major issue, because you have nothing else to support the storyline. It gets stuck at one point and takes longer than expected to reach the final confrontation. Many sobbing and frustration scenes are stretched up to two minutes or so, making it unnecessarily lengthy and slow. On the positive side, we have some power-packed performances by Aparna Sen and Debashree Roy. Both are simply outstanding-their expressions and conversations are brilliant and unforgettable. The supporting cast is fine too, and the technical aspects fit well in their places. Rituparno Ghosh's film works as a whole, but it's just that the hype around it was too much, and I found it underwhelming in comparison.
RATING - 6/10*
By - #samthebestest.
Huge fan of Autumn Sonata (1978), but this wasn't close. Rituparno Ghosh-what a genius filmmaker, and I have no second thoughts about it. This was just his second film, yet he impressed so many critics as well as the National Award juries. If someone called him India's Ingmar Bergman, then I wouldn't have minded, because he came so close to cracking similar themes of storytelling. Autumn Sonata, one of Bergman's last films, was a conversational classic and carried a very experimental narrative for its time. It explored strained relationships through complex theories, leaving viewers stunned with the director's vision. Ghosh's Unishe April is a sort of remake of that film, with of course a few changes suiting Indian traditions and social norms. Unlike Bergman's flick, which had several other supporting characters playing pivotal roles in the narrative, Unishe April mainly focuses on the mother-daughter's strained relationship and scattered bond. It becomes too personal and lacks an intricate structure in its narrative, thereby distancing itself from the Swedish film. That's actually the major issue, because you have nothing else to support the storyline. It gets stuck at one point and takes longer than expected to reach the final confrontation. Many sobbing and frustration scenes are stretched up to two minutes or so, making it unnecessarily lengthy and slow. On the positive side, we have some power-packed performances by Aparna Sen and Debashree Roy. Both are simply outstanding-their expressions and conversations are brilliant and unforgettable. The supporting cast is fine too, and the technical aspects fit well in their places. Rituparno Ghosh's film works as a whole, but it's just that the hype around it was too much, and I found it underwhelming in comparison.
RATING - 6/10*
By - #samthebestest.
Did you know
- TriviaBengali remake of Bergman classic Autumn Sonata
Details
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Nineteenth Apri
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 2h 18m(138 min)
- Color
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