Benegal addressed a nearly-packed auditorium at the launch of "Satyajit Ray Film Retrospective" in Israel.
The National Award-winning director said Ray's entry into the Indian cinema gave a sense that "nobody knew what had hit them", changing the whole of filmmaking, particularly "relating to subjects and the manner in which he handled them."
"Satyajit Ray was, of course, the most important Indian filmmaker. I don't think there has been another of that quality since," Benegal said.
Seven of Ray's classics - the trilogy ('Pather Panchali', 'Aparajito' and 'Apur Sansar'), "Jalsagar", "Ganashatru", "Ghare Baire" and "Aguntuk" will be screened in Cinematheques in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa for two weeks.
Describing the release of Ray's "Pather Panchali" in 1955 as a watershed in the evolution of Indian cinema, Benegal said that it was a landmark moment that turned everything upside down.
Benegal compared mainstream Indian cinema running on the theme of "complete entertainment" to Indian dish "Biryani, which has a bit of everything" and said such films are full of fantasy but may not necessarily reflect reality.
"Therefore one of the things that happened in the evolution of Indian cinema is that until the beginning of 1950s it was fine but suddenly there were murmurings in different parts of India that probably films of the nature that we were making could not possibly be continued for a long time. Among those who felt that way was Satyaji Ray", Benegal said.
