Skip to content

Aromas of Incandescent Reveries

Cinema, Literature, Photos…

Menu
  • home
  • about me
  • cinema
    • our cinema
    • their cinema
    • musings
  • literature
    • book reviews
    • fiction by avik
    • translations
    • creators and creations
  • photos
Menu

Review: Pather Panchali

Pather Panchali (Dir.: Satyajit Ray; Cast: Kanu Banerjee, Karuna Banerjee, Tulsi Chakrabarty et al.; Music: Ravi Shankar)

Pather Panchali marked the introduction of Satyajit Ray, arguably India’s finest filmmaker, on the world stage.

Pather Panchali, based on Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay’s identically titled novel, is the story of a small family consisting of a couple, an elderly aunt and the two young children of this couple in a rural Indian setting.

Pather Panchali is the first film of the ?Apu Trilogy?, the three Ray films chronicling the life of Apu, a village boy, over the years of his life. The film bears signs of what would make Ray a renowned name in world cinema in the years to follow. The immensely faithful portrayal of the life of the primary characters, complete with their hopes, dreams, petty troubles and idiosyncrasies, resonated deeply with the psyche of the Indian audience.

Another lasting contribution of Pather Panchali is its timeless title track composed by the renowned maestro Ravi Shankar, which even today never fails to evoke emotions indescribable in the hearts of generations of audiences.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Comments

  • houston junk car buyer on Review: Man-Eaters of Kumaon
  • avik on Translation: Bojhapora (An Understanding)
  • Nibhriti Das on Translation: Bojhapora (An Understanding)
  • avik on Review: Subarnarekha
  • Venu gopal kizhepat on Review: Subarnarekha

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Tags

anurag kashyap apu avik batman bengal bengali literature bibhutibhushan book review byomkesh christian bale cinema devdutt pattanaik feluda film review film reviews india indian cinema interstellar jim corbett kamaleshwar literature mahabharata mythology nolan play review poem poetry prosenjit rabindranath rabindranath tagore rabindrasangeet ranbir kapoor rituparno ghosh ritwick chakraborty ritwik ghatak satyajit ray sharadindu short story soumitra spielberg sunil gangopadhyay tagore translation war world cinema

Recent Posts

  • The Wait (poem) April 12, 2020
©2026 Aromas of Incandescent Reveries | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb