Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Ray, Satyajit - Eric Rhode
Ray, Satyajit - Eric Rhode
ERIC RHODE
On a first glance you might see Devi [The Goddess] … as no more than a film with a thesis, Ibsen in an Indian setting….
The thesis, it seems, is clear; and in fact is nothing less than the latent theme of the Apu trilogy made articulate….
On the level of a thesis …, the plot is both inexorable and tight. Ironies fall into place neatly—almost too neatly. A child is saved, so another child must die. Women are treated both as serfs and as idols; in any event, they are never allowed to be human beings…. In the Apu trilogy episodes were mainly related to each other by association; as the images of river and parched land recurred they took on the resonance, possibly the symbolism, of myth. In Devi episodes relate to each other with rationalist logic. So symbolism is played down; the river and landscape never become more than a beautiful backdrop to the action. Such a logic, moreover, requires motives to be highly...
[The entire page is 373 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
