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Satyajit Ray films: Restored and roaming the world

A non-Bengali Kolkata family that produced six of Satyajit Ray's films has restored them for cinema lovers around the world.

December 25, 2021 / 12:31 IST
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Satyajit Ray's films like 'Charulata' (above) are being screened across the world today, thanks to the restoration work undertaken by his producer's family.
Satyajit Ray's films like 'Charulata' (above) are being screened across the world today, thanks to the restoration work undertaken by his producer's family.

A week ago, Varsha Bansal was at Jeddah's historic Al Balad district standing in a makeshift movie hall to present a Satyajit Ray movie to a Saudi Arabian audience. The 1979 mystery film, Jai Baba Felunath (The Elephant God), was part of eight restored films from around the world that were screened in the Treasures section of the Red Sea International Film Festival, the first such event in the Middle Eastern nation coming out of a 35-year-long ban on cinemas.

"It was incredible; a half-a-century-old film by Satyajit Ray was screened in Saudi Arabia. It is motivating for new generations to watch Ray movies," says Bansal, whose family produced Jai Baba Felunath and five other Ray films.

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Besides the Jeddah festival, Ray films have travelled this year to the River to River Indian Film Festival in Florence, Italy, Hong Kong Asian Film Festival, Indian Film Festival, Melbourne, Australian Cinematheque, International Film Festival of South Asia, Toronto, and the Ljubljana International Film Festival in Slovenia. Next month, Bansal will present Nayak, the first Ray film with a superstar, at the Kolkata International Film Festival.

R.D. Bansal (first from left) produced six feature films of Satyajit Ray (centre, standing).