Known for taking up non-conventional themes,
Mrinal Sen once said that he sometimes departs from the usual beginning, middle and end approach to a narrative. With his films filled with social analysis and psychological drama, the Left-leaning director had bagged four National Film Awards as the best director and was awarded the
Padma Bhushan in 1983. On the master filmmaker’s birth anniversary, here are some rare photographs from the sets of his films, and his life.
A still from the set of the 1980 Bengali film Akaler Sandhane, which dealt with the famine in Bengal. The movie had a huge cast of professionals, and villagers playing themselves.
Shabana Azmi And
Pankaj Kapur in the 1984 Bengali film 'Khandhar'. The film, directed by Mrinal Sen, was based on a Bengali short story 'Telenapota Abishkar' (Discovering Telenapota).
Mrinal Sen in Rajasthan in 1986
Mrinal Sen with
Satyajit Ray in 1991, the year before Ray's death. Sen, Ray and
Ritwik Ghatak were contemporaries and friends, so much so that Ray and he were at Ghatak’s side before he passed away.
Mrinal Sen waiting anxiously at the gate of the nursing home to pay respects to Satyajit Ray, in Calcutta on April 24, 1992.
Mrinal Sen accepting the Dada Saheb Phalke Award from the then President Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam in New Delhi on February 2, 2005.
According to Sen, cinema was, to a large extent, a technological performance. However, experimentation and non-conformity are critical to evolve with the medium.
He showed how camera and direction can become the ideal medium to question the circumstances at that time. Being an iconoclast, the renowned filmmaker used to romanticize a poverty-stricken India which made him a class apart from others.