A moment in the first 20
minutes of the film, a seemingly unimposing scene: A young man called
Shutu takes an old pullover which once belonged to his recently
deceased father. He smells on it an finally puts it on. Later as the
film proceeds we will realize that this scene carries already the DNA
of the whole film. For now there is nothing more to know that he is
distressed by his grieve and very very lonely with it.
It was just a day before the screening in Berlin when I learned by accident that Konkona Sensharma´s A Death in
the Gunj one of the films I was waiting for in this year, was
shown in my city during an Indogerman Festival. I took a deep breath
because I almost missed this note. The excitement has a long history.
It was her performance in Shonali Bose´s Amu which lead me to
Mr. And Mrs Iyer by Aparna Sen and with that to all the glory
to her mother´s work as a director. Konkona Sen Sharma became one of
my favorite actresses, Aparna Sen one of my favorite film directors
alive. As much about her family.
The morning after the
screening I read again Anjan Dutt´s enthusiastic review of A
Death in the Gunj. Strangely the film evoked in me in another
kind but likely strong my personal echo of the 1970s like Dutt´s
masterpiece Dutta Vs Dutta – despite the visible specific
hints to a country and culture strange to me. I mean this dynamic
between the perception of the strangeness of this culture and at the same
time the recognition of the universality of human behavior. The
leather jacket of Ranvir Shorey evoked quite a déya vu in me and I
almost had this specific smell of leather in my nose. And between
what the film is and what it evokes in me, a kind of resonant cavity
arises for me. As accidental as it is, I realized on my way home that
Shutu is exactly of my generation and there are some parts of him
that I and probably a lot of male spectators will recognize if they
like it or not. Quite a mixture of feelings are flooding my mind like
in one of these heavy bizarre dreams between desire, fear and
depression.
The opening of the film is
a mystery which will dissolved at the end of the film and which gives
the film from the beginning a subliminal suspense. Two men are
looking into a boot of their car at a corps which remains invisible
to us. As we see them from the perspective of the unknown dead, it is
a ghostly non-human perspective. Soon the film opens a flashback
seven days before and tells this in exactly 7 chapters. We have no
idea what will happen but we are sure something will happen.
A group of city people
consisting of family members and friends arrive at a former
Anglo-Indian town to spend holiday in one of these old houses. The
location seems already engrossed and nearby there are tribal people.
For now the film remembers me in Satyajit Ray´s masterpiece Aranyer
Din Ratri mixed with a subtle suspense. Without knowing where the
film will lead us the slight suspense originated from the
opening sharpens our attention to even the smallest detail. The group
of people which has just arrived are neither bigger nor smaller than
life just perceptible enough for us to connect with them. But as the
film proceeds, the holiday idyll reveals small cracks, very small at the
beginning but steady growing. The growing doubt that nothing is what
it seems causes concern. The protagonists kill time with parlor
games, drinking and macabre jokes mostly on the cost of the young
sensitive Shutu. One of these subtle but nevertheless disturbing
signs is the attitude of the city people towards their servants. As a
tribal dance is like a welcomed tourist attraction the contempt of
the city people towards the servants is revealed but also the other
way around. For the servants the city people are just annoying
strangers.
In several interviews, Sensharma always mentioned her empathy for Shutu, because “Men are
often victims of the patriarchal system itself”. In her film Shutu
will be teased at the beginning than bullied and finally he will be
even beaten and hurt. The physical injuries caused by one of these
stupid horse plays are visible, the mental ones only perceptible in
his face the camera explores and in his posture.
The ensemble of characters
are like a color palette of possibilities of human behavior concerted
with each other: Tillotama Shome and Kalki Koechlin, two conflictive
women or the conflict between the nearly unchained macho Vikram
(Ranvir Shorey) and the young sensitive almost androgynous Shutu
(Vikrant Massey), to mention some of them. In this nowhere land
between the adults and a little bored girl girl called Kana, there
is Shutu placed. All together this group is something like a
kaleidoscope of different human types.
The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes. (Marcel Proust)
The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes. (Marcel Proust)
The former Anglo-Indian town itself appears like a nowhere land between city and
countryside, between culture and nature, the always present nature
which is already reconquering this man-made location. And between the
human definition of rules, gender or power and submission the
nameless undefined presence of nature is perceptible. The conditioned
human culture appears sometimes like a prison.
When some of the adult men
Nandu or Vikram are trying to “toughen up” the fragile Shutu,
their motivation is based on this imposed darwinian understanding
of nature, a man-made interpretation of nature. The film itself
suggests rather a separation or an alienation between men and nature.
There is rather an indifferent coexistence between men and nature. In
some of these intense cinema scope-images we see the mighty forest
and a tiny street. Most of the characters do not have an eye for this
beauty, but it often seems this nature watches them. There is an
uncanny encounter between Shutu( who falls into a traphole) and a wolf.
It is not more than a short eye contact but nevertheless one of the
most mysterious moments in this film. We realize that the biggest
part of the world which we captured in words lead an existence of its
own. And finally the conditioning in which we define the world
separates us from nature.
Mimi (Kalki Koechlin)
seduces Shutu twice. At first when she is very drunk. Her behavior is
a mirroring of both, Vikram who takes what he wants but in her
oppressed needs as well of Shutu. She calls him “very beautiful,
almost like a girl.” The first seducing scene is symptomatic for
the film, an combination of revealing and indicating. The second
seducing scene takes place on a grave yard, literally between the
dead. sex once in Terrence Malick´s Song to Song poetic defined as “The flame of life” appears here in Sen Sharma´s film
as a naked reflex against the fear of death or at least between the
wrong persons at the wrong place and wrong time. None of Sensharma´s characters are explicit evil but most of them are careless
and unable to feel empathy. This affair triggers a chain of events
which lead to the film´s stirring finale which I can´t reveal but
which is – still in my system.
The end credits are
rolling on a street surrounded by the forest at night seen from the
rear window of a driving car, a travelling shot which is in its
spookiness evoking in me memories in Murnau´s Nosferatu.
Literally the last traces of light are sinking into darkness of the
final fade out. This often underrated ritual of cinema, this
transition between the film projection and the reality is here as
well a little piece of art in its own right
This a very versatile
film, playing with different traditions and genres of cinema. The
suspense is as decent as the film music but strong enough to engross
us. A Death in the Gunj is as well an example of an excellent
use of this cinema scope format. This format once invented for films
bigger than life in the competition against the rising Television in
the 1950s and later used rather for artistic visions, especially by
the Japanese since the late 1950s. Sensharma uses in her film this
format in a nearly perfect dynamic between opulence (visible
especially in the wonderful landscape shots) and intimacy, between
chamber piece and landscape panorama.
A Death in the Gunj
is not only an impressing film debut feature. It is still echoing in
my mind. In simple words – good films like A Death in the Gunj
are rooted in the glorious history of cinema, enriching the presence
of it and at the same time they offering new perspectives for it´ future.
Rüdiger Tomczak
Thanks. Loved your interpretation of the love scene in the graveyard. Both the characters were dead or forgotten as unimportant for those around them.
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