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Nayak (1966 film)

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Director
  
Satyajit Ray

Release date
  
May 6, 1966 (India)

Duration
  

Language
  
Bengali

8.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Music director
  
Satyajit Ray

Country
  
India

Nayak (1966 film) movie poster

Release date
  
6 May 1966 (1966-05-06) (India) 19 July 1974 (1974-07-19) (US)

Writer
  
Satyajit Ray (story), Satyajit Ray (screenplay)

Awards
  
National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali, National Film Award for Best Screenplay

Cast
  
Uttam Kumar
(Arindam Mukherjee),
Sharmila Tagore
(Aditi),
Bireswar Sen
(Mukunda Lahiri),
Somen Bose
(Sankar),
Nirmal Ghosh
(Jyoti),
Premangshu Bose
(Biresh)

Similar movies
  
Related Satyajit Ray movies

Nayak (Bengali: নায়ক Hero) (released in English as The Hero and Nayak: The Hero) is a 1966 Indian Bengali-language drama film written and directed by Satyajit Ray. It was Ray's second entirely original screenplay, after Kanchenjungha (1962). The story revolves around a matinee idol on a 24-hour train journey from Kolkata to Delhi to receive a national award. However, he ends up revealing his mistakes, insecurities and regrets to a young journalist, who realises that behind all the glitter is a deeply lonely man. Her initial contempt for people like him turns into empathy, and she decides not to publish what he has revealed. His life journey is gradually revealed through seven flashbacks and two dreams during the train ride.

Contents

Nayak (1966 film) httpsitpworldfileswordpresscom201308nayak

Plot

Nayak (1966 film) Nayak The Hero 1966 A Ray Movie YouTube

A famous star of Bengali films, Arindam Mukherjee (Uttam Kumar), is invited to the capital to receive a prestigious award. All the flights are booked, which forces him to take the train. The morning newspaper arrives and carries with it a detailed article on an altercation he'd been involved in. In the restaurant car, he meets Aditi Sengupta (Sharmila Tagore), a young journalist who edits a modern women's magazine, Adhunika. Filled with contempt for the likes of him, she secretly plans to interview him because she thinks it'd attract more readers. He soon starts to reveal his personality, and also brings to surface the inner insecurities and his consciousness of the limitations of his 'powers'. Aditi initially takes notes, surreptitiously, but later on, out of empathy almost bordering on pity, stops. However, critical of the star, she interrogates him, leading to further introspection on his part. Slowly, his guilt about the way things turned out is very visible.

Nayak (1966 film) Nayak 1966 Satyajit Rays brooding character study featuring a

Arindam also mentions Shankar-da, his mentor, who had never wanted Arindam to join films, being a strong opposer of the medium. He talks about his first day in film, and on the different experiences in faced with other workers in the field and some of the things that happened to them.

Nayak (1966 film) Old films and me Diary of an actor Nayak

Toward the end of the train journey, Arindam is drunk and feels a need to confide his wrongdoings. He asks the conductor to fetch Aditi. He begins to reveal the reason behind the altercation he was a part of, but Aditi stops him, as she has already guessed. It was an affair he'd had with one of his co-actors, Promila. Afraid that he might commit suicide, Aditi makes sure he returns to his cubicle, before going back to her own.

Nayak (1966 film) Satyajit Rays Nayak A scene by scene analysis Film Book Club

As the star re-lives and examines his life with Aditi, a bond develops between them. Aditi realizes that in spite of his fame and success, Arindam is a lonely man, in need of empathy. Out of respect for him, she chooses to suppress the story and tears up the notes she has written. She lets the hero preserve his public image.

Cast

Nayak (1966 film) Nayak 1966

  • Uttam Kumar - Arindam Mukherjee
  • Sharmila Tagore - Aditi Sengupta
  • Bireswar Sen - Mukunda Lahiri
  • Somen Bose - Sankar
  • Nirmal Ghosh - Jyoti
  • Premangshu Bose - Biresh
  • Sumita Sanyal - Promila Chatterjee
  • Ranjit Sen - Haren Bose
  • Bharati Devi - Manorama (Mr. Bose's wife)
  • Lali Chowdhury - Bulbul (Mr. Bose's daughter)
  • Kamu Mukherjee - Pritish Sarkar
  • Susmita Mukherjee - Molly (Mr. Sarkar's wife)
  • Subrata Sensharma - Ajoy
  • Jamuna Sinha - Sefalika (Ajoy's wife)
  • Satya Banerjee - Monk of WWWW organisation
  • Soundtrack

    Nayak (1966 film) Nayak 1966 IMDb

    All lyrics written by Satyajit Ray; all music composed by Satyajit Ray.

    Production

    Ray wrote the screenplay of the film at Darjeeling in May, where he went during off-season from filming. Even then he had Uttam Kumar in his mind for the lead, but not as an actor, rather a "phenomenon". The film was shot in the latter half of 1965. • Letter by Ray to Marie Seton, author of “Portrait of a Director”. “I wanted a relationship to develop between the Matinee Idol and a girl on the train. Romance was out – the time being so short – but I wanted something with an interesting development. The transition from apathy mixed with a certain dislike, to sympathetic understanding, seemed a promising one. So I made Aditi a slightly snooty sophisticate who questions and resists the easy charm, good looks, sangfroid, etc etc. of the Idol, until she discovers there’s an area where he is helpless, lonely, and in need of guidance. From the point where he begins to unburden himself, Aditi can ignore his façade because she’s had a glimpse of what lies beneath. At first he is ‘material’ for her for a journalistic probe, until the process of unbarring reaches a point where she realizes it would be unethical to exploit it. Sympathy and desire to help is the next step. The bond between the two is tenuous, but real. Intellectually clearly above him, her goodness consists in providing him with the small area of contact that exists between them…”

    Awards

  • National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali, 1967
  • Bodil Award for Best Non-European Film, 1967
  • Special Jury Award, Berlin International Film Festival, 1966
  • Critics' Prize (UNICRIT Award), Berlin International Film Festival, 1966
  • B.F.J.A Best Actor Award: Uttam Kumar
  • B.F.J.A Best Director Award: Satyajit Ray
  • Nominations

  • Golden Bear for Best Film, Berlin International Film Festival, 1966
  • Preservation and Restoration

    The film is one of four Ray films which were digitally restored and set for a re-release in January 2014.

    The Academy Film Archive preserved Nayak in 2004.

    References

    Nayak (1966 film) Wikipedia
    Nayak (1966 film) IMDb Nayak (1966 film) themoviedb.org