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The Cloud-Capped Star (1960, India)
(aka Meghe Dhaka Tara)
In Ritwik Ghatak's tragic melodramatic musical, set
in the late 1950s outside of post-partition Calcutta (Kolkata), India,
about a struggling, impoverished Bengali family, refugees from East
Pakistan - and functioning as a critique of the institution of the
family, and as a painful allegory about the traumatic consequences
of the partition of Bengal:
- the exquisitely-filmed moment of singing under speckles
of light shining through lattice-work - a duet of a sorrowful Rabindranath
Tagore poem, first seen being performed solely by the family's
oldest lazy and irresponsible son Shankar (Anil Chatterjee) - an
aspiring singer who had just found work and was about to depart
from home; with a shift of camera angles, he was seen to be joined
by another - sitting side by side with his self-sacrificing, wrongly-treated,
exploited, subjugated and despairing older sister Nita (Supriya
Choudhury); the song ended with her despairing head leaning backwards
and then collapsing in tears
- the dutiful heroine had given up all of her own life's
opportunities (a college Master's degree program) to take a lowly
job and function as the breadwinner, to support her uncaring, ungrateful
and callous family (including her aging, weak-willed unemployed and
hapless father (Bijon Bhattacharya) and manipulative selfish mother
(Gita De), and three other children); ultimately,
Nita lost her job, her fiancee and her health
Nita's Impassioned Plea to Shankar: "I Want
to Live!"
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- in one of the final sequences, set on a hillside
- Nita made an impassioned, agonized cry or plea to Shankar and
the hills to let her live longer: (her final words: "I wanted
to live! Tell me just once that I’ll live ... I want to live");
she fell into her brother's arms - suffering from a terminal case
of tuberculosis
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Shankar with Sister Nita Behind Lattice Work
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