Ray, Satyajit - John Simon

JOHN SIMON

[It] was indeed a miracle for even so modest a talent as Satyajit Ray's to emerge with Pather Panchali two decades ago. It is not so much that Ray's films are slow, or pallid, or derivative, or choppy, or technically rudimentary—though they are all of these things, too—as that they are, for the most part, dull. Pather and the other two films of the so-called Apu Trilogy seemed better than what followed, perhaps because of the novelty of seeing films from India. What impressed me in Ray's later films was the infallible gift for making things come out less varied, dimensional, moving (in both senses) than life.

Some of this is not the fault of Ray, but of the political mess and cultural wasteland, the underfinancing and over-censoring he must contend with. But all this oppressiveness works, in some ways, to his advantage: it precludes a lot of competition, excuses many crudities. And, true, there are cultural differences that may...

[The entire page is 529 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: