Subrata Sen: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 00:24, 13 November 2016
Subrata Sen | |
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Born | Kolkata, West Bengal, India | 29 May 1963
Occupation(s) | Film director, film producer, screenwriter |
Website | subratasen |
Notes | |
Banner: FILMWALLAH, Subrata Sen Communications |
Subrata Sen (Bengali: সুব্রত সেন), (born 29 May 1963) is a critically acclaimed Bengali Indian film director, screenwriter, novelist and producer.
Biography
Early life
Subrata Sen was born in Kolkata in 1963. He went to South Point High School and graduated in Physics from Presidency College, then affiliated with the University of Calcutta. After a brief stint in a bank as an officer, he joined journalism in 1987 in Anandabazar Patrika, the largest circulated daily in India. He shifted from Anandabazar Patrika to The Statesman in 1992, then he joined Banglalive dot com, an internet magazine where he remained until he made his first film Ek Je Achhe Kanya (The Girl) in 2001. His wife Parongama Sen is a Physicist of international repute.
Films
Ek Je Achhe Kanya, also known as The Girl in English is Subrata Sen's first film, which made waves in Bengal and India. It won massive critical acclaim and at the same time was a major success story in the commercial arena[citation needed]. This movie is said to be influenced by a Hollywood movie The Crush starring Alicia Silverstone. The movie also saw the debut performance of Konkona Sen Sharma and earned an entry into the Karlovy Vary Film Festival,[1] besides winning the Gollapudi Srinivas National Award for a debut director.[2]
His follow-up film, 2002's ...And They Dared to Dream known as Swapner Feriwala in Bengali—while commercially not as successful as The Girl, earned Sen some shelf-life in international arena, including an inclusion into that year's Karlovy Vary Film Festival line-up,[3] proving Sen to be an emerging maverick of Bengali and Indian cinema.
Sen's third movie Vacation Blues, known as Nil Nirjane in Bengali was made in 2003 and was the first digital movie to be made in India. The movie became a cult among the young population in Bengal, despite attracting flak from orthodox critics because of a liplock scene between two young females. The film won the Best Experimental Film award at the Down Under Film Festival, Australia.[4]
Sen based his fourth and fifth movies on Bengali literature. His fourth movie Hotath Neerar Jonnyo (Suddenly for Nira) was made in 2005, based on a short story by Sunil Gangopadhyay. The movie faced problems from the Indian Censor Board because of some reported explicit scenes and was commercially released only after a few shots were deleted.[5]
Sen's fifth movie Bibar (Calcutta Unabashed) made in 2006 was based on a controversial Bengali classic by Samaresh Basu. The film won the best actor and best actress awards at the Osian Cinefan, New Delhi—the international film festival of Asian films.[6]
Koyekti Meyer Golpo released in domestic circle in 2012 and received flak from local critics. However, it won an entry into the competition section of Madrid International Film Festival 2013 and had nominations in Best Feature Film category and Best Costume Design. It eventually won an award in the Best Costume Design category.[7][8]
Sen's films are said to be the beginning of "urban genre" of Bengali films and are now course material in plenty of film schools in India. Though not as famous as his seniors beyond his home-state Bengal, Sen is the maverick filmmaker of Indian Cinema whose work, as felt in Karlovy Vary Film Festival catalogue, strongly resembles that of Pedro Almodóvar.[9]
Influences and impact
Sen never had any formal training in film-making. He describes making of Ek Je Achhe Kanya his first training ground. However, as a child, he came in close contact with Satyajit Ray, the master Indian filmmaker, while writing for Sandesh, a children's magazine which the maestro edited. It was probably Ray's over towering influence in childhood, which initiated Sen into delving in filmmaking.
But despite his close association with Ray, Sen has consciously avoided Ray's style of filmmaking. "Ray is a fixation of Indian Filmmakers. We have to get out of his influence and make movies which are different", he says.
Besides Ray, the person whose style influenced Sen the most was Jean-Luc Godard. "We have to break all forms and all moulds to make Bengali film survive. Godard is our ideal", is Sen's frank admission[weasel words][vague]. Incidentally Subrata Sen's second film, Swapner Feriwala, is a tribute to Godard.
His first film, "Ek Je Achhe Kanya" has been acknowledged by the Jadavpur University as the "First New wave Film" for the young generation in the post Satyajit Ray era. The film has been included in the University's Film Studies course from 2002.
Filmography
The following is the list of films directed by Subrata Sen. For many of these movies, Subrata Sen is also credited for the story, screenplay:
Director
Year | Film | Language | Cast |
2001 | Ek Je Achhe Kanya | Bengali | Konkona Sen Sharma, Sabyasachi Chakrabarty, Debashree Roy |
2002 | Swapner Feriwala | Bengali | Subrata Dutta, Ferdous Ahmed, Nilanjana Sharma, Dipankar De |
2003 | Nil Nirjane | Bengali | Moonmoon Sen, Raima Sen, June Malia |
2004 | Hotath Neerar Jonnyo | Bengali | Bickram Ghosh, Jaya Seal, Tina Majumdar |
2006 | Bibar | Bengali | Subrata Datta, Tannistha Chatterjee, Payel Sarkar |
Unreleased | Nondinee | Bengali | Swastika Mukherjee, Mir Asaf Ali, Others |
2012 | Those City Girls | Bengali | Raima Sen, Parno Mittra, Tanusree, Mumtaz Sorcar, Locket Chatterjee, Sanjoy Sinharoy |
2014 | Sada Canvas | Bengali | Paoli Dam, Rohit Roy, Malobika Banerjee, Mumtaz Sorcar, Locket Chatterjee, Aparajita Ghosh |
Writer and novelist
Subrata Sen has written the stories for five of his movies, namely Ek Je Acche Kanya, Swapner Feriwala, Nil Nirjane, Nondinee and Koyekti Meyer Golpo and is the scriptwriter of all his movies. He is the writer and scriptwriter of all his television fiction work too. He has not worked on anyone else's script so far. Subrata Sen also has four published Bengali novels to his credit, namely Joubon Japon (ISBN 978-81-7756-935-3), Dakbakshe Nil Kham (ISBN 978-81-7756-865-3), Chhayanot (ISBN 978-81-8374-261-0) and Banvasi (ISBN )
Story and screenplay
Subrata Sen often writes both story and screenplay of his films, apart from Bibar and Hotath Neerar Jonnyo. Bibar was based on famous Bengali writer Samaresh Basu's novel. Whereas Hotath Neerar Jonnyo was adapted from a short story of another famous writer Sunil Gangopadhyay.
Sen's quotes
"Am a normal human being. Take me or leave me." And the normal human being said, "Let there be light, sound and action..."
"Cinema is a way of life but life is not only about cinema. A filmmaker now, having done five movies and three television films in the past six years, but it's not only cinema that holds my interests. Started off long ago as a journalist with ABP, changed to Statesman and worked in Kolkata and Delhi for long years. In 2001 my first movie Ek Je Aachhe Kanya, (which was Konkona Sensharma's debut movie too) was released and suddenly I turned a filmmaker."
References
- ^ "KVIFF". KVIFF. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
- ^ "Gollapudi Aaward". Gollapudinational award. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
- ^ "KVIFF archive". KVIFF.
- ^ Indian Express http://expressindia.indianexpress.com/news/fullstory.php?newsid=21133. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
{{cite news}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ "Sudden scissorhands slap for Neera". The Telegraph. Calcutta, India. 29 June 2004. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
- ^ "Festival Report". Retrieved 23 March 2013.
- ^ "City girls at Madrid fest". Times of India. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
- ^ "MIFF 2013". MIFF 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
{{cite web}}
:|first=
missing|last=
(help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "KVIFF catalogue". KVIFF. Retrieved 27 March 2013.
External links