Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Ray, Satyajit - Geoff Brown
Ray, Satyajit - Geoff Brown
GEOFF BROWN
The Middleman is no exact sequel [to Company Limited], for Ray's portrait of the sad inter-relationship between amorality and success is painted in far greater detail and in darker colours. There is more explicit emphasis on the break-up of India's past traditions…. Religion is specifically degraded…. Unlike many other directors (Altman, for instance), Ray can depict sour and cynical characters or events without being sour himself: from the opening scenes the film bristles with the warm, involving comedy of everyday oddities and indignities, conveying Ray's moral and message with far more effectiveness than any strident tub-thumping…. Ray's camera observes the comic disasters and follies with his customary dry detachment: during a drive …, a dashboard compartment repeatedly flaps open every time the vehicle hits a pothole—an event deliciously signalled by shots of one of the car's wheels hurtling fatefully along the road. The film...
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