Mrinal Sen(1923-2018)
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Sen is one of his nation's most politically active filmakers. After
having studied physics at university in Calcutta, Sen worked as a
freelance journalist, a salesman of patent medicines and a sound
technician in a film studio. In the mid-1940s he joined the Indian
People's Theatre Association and at that time began to read about and
study film. The association had links to the Communist Party of India
and this heralded the beginning of Sen's involvement with Marxist
politics. In 1956 Sen made his debut with Raat Bhore (1956), the first of his 30
(as of 2002) films. Although his first film was openly political, he
achieved national status as the director of a comedy, Bhuvan Shome (1969).
Influenced by Italian neorealism and the work of fellow countryman
Satyajit Ray, Sen used location shooting and non-professional casts in his
early films. By the 1970s he was making wider use of symbolism and
allegory. Although he remains politically committed, Sen feels that the
"difference between party Marxists and a private Marxist like me is
that others think they pocketed truth, whereas I am always in search of
truth... " Sen's films have won numerous international awards. The Case Is Closed (1982), a
scathing look at the hypocritical reaction of a bourgeois Calcutta
family to the death of a servant boy, took home the Jury Prize from the
1983 Cannes Film Festival.