Ajantrik

Ritwik Ghatak

T. int.: Pathetic Fallacy. Scen.: Ritwik Ghatak. F.: Dinen Gupta. M.: Ramesh Joshi. Scgf.: Robi Chattopadhyaya. Mus.: Ali Akbar Khan. Int: Kali Bannerjee (Bimal), Kajal Gupta (giovane donna), Shriman Deepak, Gyanesh Mukherjee (meccanico), Keshto  Mukherjee,  Gangapada Basu. Prod.: Promode Lahiry per L.B. Films International
DCP. D.: 102′. Bn.

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

‘One of the few truly original talents in the cinema this country has produced’ was how Satyajit Ray described his contemporary, Ritwik Ghatak. Ajantrik, Ghatak’s first released feature, proposes ‘an emotional integration with the machine age’ through the story of an ecentric taxi-driver named Bimal and a battered old Chevrolet called Jagaddal. The wheezing, honking, rattling car has a mind of its own, and Bimal too treats it as a human being. As he plies his trade in small-town Bihar and the regions of the Oraon tribe, the film explores the comical and philosophical aspects of the strange bond between man and machine.

 

Freedom from Fetishes
A refugee of India’s Partition, Ritwik Ghatak first thought of Ajantrik when the fledgling nation had been pulled apart into warring states repressing their own varied people, impoverishing themselves through repeated crises of identity. The original inhabitants of India live along its central forests and have been truly independent of any colonization. Ghatak had lived amongst the Oraons at the eastern end of these forests, where perhaps the plough was first perfected. The inhabitants of Central India have always had access to the finest iron ore in the world, from which other people have made weapons and machines that speed up organic tasks to lethal limits.
But Ghatak knew that the Oraons – and even those who lived on the periphery of their cosmos, such as himself – could counterpoint the violent waves of civilization’s upheavals through collective compassion, born of eros and its epistemes. Dance, movement and fluttering banners are forms that have grown from mere fetishes of individuals to alankaras, or figures of speech and music. They in turn can yield the abstractions to approximate signs. The notations, then, can create realizations of science and art, narrative beyond chronologies.
That is how Ritwik Ghatak arrived at the bizarre structure – if it be so called – of Pathetic Fallacy. Imagine giving a film a title as historically abstract as that! Literally, the title Ajantrik extends the word jantrik (mechanical) to suggest its antithesis. We have seen the end of the era that hegemonized the mechanical over the organic and the self-transformative. In this film of episodes that leads to mutivalent interpretations, having no end or targeted object as it were, Ghatak wants to restore to us the signs that the Oraons and others like them (spread all over the earth) sought to find in their experience.
It seems to me that the movement of dance frees the fetish from its otherworldly awe, making us both ecstatic and attentive. The fresh tribal air that wafts through the film gives us a promise of primeval freedom, from enclosing ourselves in any garb of stitched habit. The magical can never be levelled to a linear narrative with a beginning, middle and end. It is ‘episodic’, iterative, moves in curves and spirals that seem to open up and impel expression, contain and liberate from its grasp inner feeling, the secret of energy, desire, of ornament forever being stolen from the divine bride.

Kumar Shahani