HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentBefore Mission Raniganj, came this film on Jharia coalfield, where century-old fires burn nonstop

Before Mission Raniganj, came this film on Jharia coalfield, where century-old fires burn nonstop

Lubdhak Chatterjee's Locarno-premiered debut feature film 'Whispers of Fire & Water' is a meditation on environmental and human tragedy seen through the lens of an individual's internal journey.

October 17, 2023 / 03:00 IST
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Lubdhak Chatterjee's Locarno-premiered 'Whispers of Fire and Water' was shot in the Jharia coal mines and Maromar jungles in Palamou, in Jharkhand.
Lubdhak Chatterjee's Locarno-premiered 'Whispers of Fire and Water' was shot in the Jharia coal mines and Maromar jungles in Palamou, in Jharkhand.

As Hindi cinema's interest in the lives of miners in eastern India’s coalfields revives with Mission Raniganj: The Great Bharat Rescue (in which Akshay Kumar plays the ‘mining rescue expert’ Jaswant Singh Gill), it harks back to the days Yash Chopra made Amitabh Bachchan atone for a past guilt by sticking it out in the claustrophobic black holes rescuing fellow miners in Kaala Patthar (1979) while chanting: “My pain is my destiny and I can’t avoid it”. Between these two films came Lubdhak Chatterjee’s Whispers of Fire & Water, which premiered at the Locarno International Film Festival this August.

Of course, Chatterjee's observational and experiential film is devoid of any hero-worshipping, saviour complex, rescue missions and hyperbolic titles. Chatterjee's protagonist is a lanky, weak, city-bred creature who undergoes an internal turmoil in this stark landscape.

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Shiva (Sagnik Mukherjee) is an audio artist, who goes to Jharkhand’s Jharia coal mines (run by Coal India subsidiary Bharat Coking Coal Ltd). There, he is to record the sounds to bring back to Kolkata, for an art installation. Commerce and art both profiteers off the locals. The film is structurally divided into two parts, one segues into the other. The coal mines and jungles. At both the places, the people Shiva listens to — a school teacher, an inspector, a tribal man who lives alone in Sohrai-art-adorned mudhouse in the jungles — and his experiences (murder witness) embark Shiva on to a journey of self-realisation. A dark thriller-like build up of the first turns into a meditative reflection in the second half. Two halves joined by a thud sound, of the system on helpless individuals, of the blasts in the coal fields, to the roar of the gushing waterfall in the jungle. A smart hack by editor Arjun Gourisaria.