Ray's 'Pather Panchali' only Indian film on 'Variety' 100 Greatest Movies of All Time

Story by  ATV | Posted by  Nakul Shivani | Date 22-12-2022
Still from the Satyajit ray classic 'Pather Panchali'
Still from the Satyajit ray classic 'Pather Panchali'

 

Los Angeles

Satyajit Ray's neo-realist classic, 'Pather Panchali', is the only Indian film to feature in 117-year-old 'Variety' magazine's first-ever '100 Greatest Movies Of All Time' list.

The list is important because it has been put together by more than 30 editors and writers of the magazine that invented the word 'showbiz'. They include Manori Ravindran, the London-based international executive editor, and Rajinikanth's biographer and 'Variety' contributor Naman Ramachandran.

Topped by Alfred Hitchcock's slasher masterpiece, 'Psycho' (1960), the list's top five movies are 'The Wizard of Oz' (1939), 'The Godfather' (1972), 'Citizen Kane' (1941) and 'Pulp Fiction' (1994).

Also included are memorable classics that are on the syllabi of every respectable film institute - from Charlie Chaplin's 'City Lights' to 'Casablanca', 'The Rules of the Game', 'Singin' in the Rain', 'All About Eve', 'It's A Wonderful Life' and 'Seven Samurai'.

In their comment on why they included 'Pather Panchali' (ranked No. 55), the jury noted: "Long before Richard Linklater's 'Boyhood', there was Satyajit Ray's exquisitely paced and structured Apu Trilogy, the holy peak of all chaptered coming-of-age narratives.

"Restrained but also universally relatable, the Bengali filmmaker's debut is the first of those three movies, which put Indian cinema on the international art-house map. Like a regional riff on Italian Neorealism, the inherently humanist 'Pather Panchali' is both a loving portrait of a mostly matriarchal upbringing and an awe-inspiring vision of rural life, as reflected through the impressionable eyes of its young protagonist. The film's captivating images include chasing after a passing train and playing in a monsoon, which add up to a pure and soul-nourishing experience."

Back in its time, Ray's film, based on Bibhuti Bhushan Bandyopadhyay's 1929 novel of the same name, featured a little-known cast and was produced by the Government of West Bengal on a shoestring budget. It won the 1955 National Award for best film and was named the best human document at Cannes in 1956.

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At that time, 'Variety' had commented: "The film ... poetically and lyrically unfolds a tender but penetrating tale of coming of age in India, a land of poverty but also of spiritual hope. Two adolescents, a boy and his sister, grow up in this atmosphere. The film fuses all aspects of picture making into a moving whole that shows India perceptively for the first time to a Western audience."