Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Ray, Satyajit - Chris Schemering
Ray, Satyajit - Chris Schemering
CHRIS SCHEMERING
Distant Thunder, a rare color film by Satyajit Ray, is perhaps the master film-maker's loveliest, but it could take the cake as his most simple-minded and literal….
Ray gets in a few social barbs at the huszling middle class. But while Ray plants the seed for satire, he doesn't go anywhere with it. It's a red herring—the calm before the storm.
After this point the narrative becomes an exposition of the theme: what war does to people, specifically what war does to Ray's innocents who will endure famine although the war never touches them directly. Distant Thunder has been compared with Bergman's Shame but the vivid images matched with heavy metaphors and tired plot bones brings it closer to Cries and Whispers, Bergman's awesome closet drama…. Distant Thunder begins as a fairy tale romance and ends on the same note; there's nowhere the film can go dramatically…. Nevertheless, the film moves...
[The entire page is 604 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Guido Aristarco
- DOUGLAS McVAY
- Jonathan Harker
- Arlene Croce
- Cynthia Grenier
- John Burgess
- John Gillett
- Eric Rhode
- Gordon Gow
- Tony Mallerman
- Eric Rhode
- Peter Cowie
- Penelope Houston
- Richard Schickel
- Richard Schickel
- Chidananda Das Gupta
- Ernest Callenbach
- Elizabeth Sussex
- William S. Pechter
- Tom Milne
- Robin Wood
- Pauline Kael
- Stanley Kauffmann
- Alan Ross
- Tom Milne
- John Coleman
- Penelope Gilliatt
- Penelope Gilliatt
- Judith Crist
- Tom Milne
- Pauline Kael
- John Simon
- John Russell Taylor
- Chris Schemering
- William S. Pechter
- Geoff Brown
- Tom Milne
- J. Hoberman
- Copyright
