Filmmaker Aparna Sen on Friday said her film "Ghawre Baire Aaj", an adaptation of Rabindranath Tagore's novel "Ghare Baire", is her most "political and outspoken" work till date and talks about the silencing of "moderate voices".
The famed Bengali filmmaker, known for films such as "36 Chowringhee Lane", "Mr. and Mrs. Iyer", "The Japanese Wife" and "Iti Mrinalini", said she wanted to initiate a "sane debate" with the movie.
The story, previously adapted by Satyajit Ray into a 1984 movie, revolves around three protagonists, one of which is loosely based on slain journalist Gauri Lankesh.
"The characters are not based on real life people, except for the character of Nikhilesh, who is vaguely and loosely based on Gauri Lankesh. Before that the murders of Govind Pansare and M M Kalburgi and all of them. Everyone who has tried to be moderate has been silenced by somebody or the other.
"It is not necessarily the Hindutva voices, it is also the Islamic fundamentalist who silence the moderate voices. Any kind of fundamentalism silences the voices of reason and moderation. That is a big concern and should concern anyone who has a regard for healthy democracy," Sen told film critic Rajeev Masand during a panel discussion at the Jagran Film Festival.
With the film, Sen said, she has tried to present the arguments of both the right and the left.
"I have tried to give two sides of the argument the rightist and the leftist. I have not tried to give only one side. What I hope is that it will provoke is a sane debate. A sane, rational debate. I hate being shrill or preachy. But I hope that this film will give rise to a debate in a sane way."
"Like Mr and Mrs Iyer', it is about how the outside world affects the home. That is the Tagore story too. How the outside world impinges on the domestic scene. But yes I see it as a political film."
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