Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Ray, Satyajit - John Russell Taylor
Ray, Satyajit - John Russell Taylor
JOHN RUSSELL TAYLOR
Ray is a great director, and ipso facto cannot be typical of anything, perhaps not even reliably himself (it is the prerogative of all great artists constantly to take us by surprise). But it seems reasonable to assume that he must have come from something and fit into some sort of context. And so of course he does. Not particularly a cinematic context: eighteen years after the appearance of Pather Panchali, the first of the Apu trilogy, he is still a solitary figure, a unique talent in Indian cinema, and the Indian cinema apart from him has hardly moved on from the kind of nonsense he gently satirizes in the filmgoing sequence of Apur Sansar, all trashy, theatrical, sentimental, and fantasticated. But a literary and artistic context is very much thereā¦. (pp. 165-66)
Ray's first films, the Apu trilogy, at once place him in a certain tradition by being based on a modern classic of Bengali literature, the...
[The entire page is 5103 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
