606 Anna Salai
Chennai, Tamil Nadu

Jahnu Barua Retrospective - Film Festival. Indo CIne Appreciation Foundation presenting a Jahnu Barua Retrospective (Films by the Award-winning Assamese Director Jahnu Barua). Jahnu Barua is one of the most brilliant among the contemporary Indian filmmakers. He is closely associated with Assamese Seventh Art. Jahnu Barua is the first Assamese director to interpret onscreen the connection between politics and social and cultural events with an aim of bringing an awareness to the public, Jahnu Barua adopts generally a direct style, which serves the levelheaded development of the narrative. He has made several films in Assamese and Hindi. His films are marked by a humanistic vision. Jahnu Barua's films are critically acclaimed in India and abroad. However, they have hardly tasted commercial success. Jahnu Barua's first feature film is Aparoopa (1982). It is masterpiece as far as its style and technicalities are concerned. It is a very subtle story, set in the colonial period in one of the lush tea plantations for which Assam is famous. The film deals with a young woman who has to give up her university education for marrying a rich planter, a marriage arranged by her parents. The character of Aparoopa is portrayed beautifully by Suhasini Mulay. The plantation and its social routine become a prison of boredom for her since her husband completely neglects her for his business. Things get worse when she discovers, outraged, that her marriage was for the sake of wiping off a huge debt owed by her father. She considers herself as having been sold to her husband. Then one day an old classmate, now an army officer, visits them, she envisages that he might provide a way out of the impasse in which she finds herself. However the film established Jahnu Barua in India and abroad, propelling Assamese cinema on to the map of the art film, is Halodiya Choraye Baodhan Khai (1987). It is deliberate demystifying pastoral title, given the subject of his film. According to Jahnu Barua it is a political film, which takes a stand against the amoral. In the plot the protagonist finds himself to be on the right side and attacking the political opinions of his bad opponents. This film apparently set in the agrarian vein of the struggle of the peasant against a zamindar or landlord. This film was acclaimed by the critics for its cinematography and the authentic description of the rural life and its problems. It was awarded at the Locarno Film Festival. Papori (1986) is a very grim melodrama set in the period of massive student demonstrations in Assam for boycotting the elections imposed by New Delhi. The film depicts political corruption and violence in a number of areas of Indian life. The rampant corruption of the state occurs again in a somewhat didactic and definitely ecological film, Banani (1990). This denunciation of rampant deforestation is told through a story and an everyday life, which is accessible and is intended to create awareness. Firingoti (1991) is the beautiful story of Ritu, a widowed teacher transferred to a small Assamese village. The school here was destroyed by fire ten years earlier. The plot shows the confrontation of the woman with the prevalent male chauvinism and how she succeeds in convincing the village council or the Panchayat to repair even a radio. Ritu manages to build a school but it burnt down by a supposedly 'son of the soil' and she has to return with a heavy heart. However she is comforted by the promise of the inhabitants of reconstructing the school so that no one can suppress the spark of knowledge. The splendid film by Jahnu Barua, Hkhagoroloi Bohu Door (1997) seems to inaugurate a less socio-political and more intimist phase and distinguishes itself by remarkable sobriety. In this film there are two heroes: the undulating river, which is indifferent to mankind and Pulwal. This character is essayed by the superb actor Bishnu Khargoria. The hero earns his livelihood as a ferryman of the river

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Added by buzzintown india on August 19, 2009

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