Film Festival: Agantuk (1991)

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Agantuk (‘The Stranger’) is a 1991 Bengali-language drama film written and directed by Satyajit Ray. Notable for being Ray’s last film, it was based on one of his own short stories, Atithi. The film is a joint Indo-French production.

The plot depicts a well-off family which is paid an unexpected, and rather unwanted, visit by a man claiming to be the woman’s long-lost uncle. Anila receives a letter from a long-lost uncle she last saw 35 years ago, who hopes to stay at her family home in Calcutta, India. Her husband, Subhindra, immediately suspects that this “uncle” may be an impostor. So when the stranger arrives, he’s given the third degree by husband, friends and even the family lawyer. He’s only accepted by Anila’s young son, who is in thrall to his stories of global travel.

The film was critically acclaimed upon its release. The film ranked 2nd on Cahiers du Cinéma’s Top 10 Films of the Year List in 1992. Leah Garchik of San Francisco Chronicle wrote the film “is a fitting ending to Ray’s 30-film career — it was Film of the Year in India in 1992 — a strong and underlined summing- up statement about capital-M Man and capital-C Civilization.”

What to watch out for:

It is said that after the final shot of Agantuk, Satyajit Ray announced – ‘That’s it. I don’t have anything more to say.’ A few months later, he passed away in a nursing home in Kolkata.

Agantuk raises more questions than answers, and each of those questions makes us wonder about ourselves. In trying to reveal the stranger’s true identity, when Sudhindra’s barrister friend grills him about his whereabouts over the last three and a half decades, what comes out is truly astonishing.

The film is currently not available for viewing.

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