They are melodrama-like. The story is linear. In the fifties, the story revolves around a Bengali family in Kolkata. After the partition of India in 1947, the refugee family took shelter on the outskirts of Kolkata. The main character in the film is Neeta, the eldest daughter of the family. He had to take care of the family before he could take his studies. Neeta's old father was studying at school; Mother looks after the house. Neeta has two school-age siblings, Geetha and Montu. Neeta's elder brother Shankar; There is no mind in the world. With The meditation of Shankar, he practices classical music; He wants to be a big singer. Neeta does not give up hope; Dreaming of brother Shankar, with his lover Sonth. The PHD will finally come back to him. You'll marry her.
The story keeps turning. Neeta's father and Montu were in an accident. Shankar goes to Bombay to become a singer. Sonth comes back, but he doesn't marry Neeta, to marry Geetha. Neeta becomes sick, tuberculosis, body is broken, yet she does not give up.
Shankar returned from Bombay, becoming a classical singer. Neeta's final illness does not catch her eye. Neeta was admitted to hospital on the hill. When he comes to the swing of life and death, he tells Shankar that he wants to live. In the sky, the mountains are echoed by the akuti of the nether.
acting
Supriya Chowdhury — Neeta
Anil Chattopadhyay - Shankar
Niranjan Roy — Sonth
Geetha Ghotak — Geetha
Bijan Bhattacharya — Dad
Geetha Dey — Mother
Dju Bhawal — Montu
Janesh Mukherjee
Ronen Raychowdri
skill
Main story : Shakti-e-Rajguru
Illustration : Ritik Kumar Ghotak
Cinematography : Dayan Gupta
Reviewing : Ramesh Yogi
Word : Satyan Chattopadhyay
Art Instructions : Robi Chattopadhyay
Music : Jyotirindra Maitra
Production : Illustration
information
The film is screened at various international festivals including the Netherlands International Film Festival (1991), The Singapore International Film Festival (1997), the Febio Film Festival in the Czech Republic (2005).
South Indian sounds are angry, and this anger-based idea is used in the music of the film.
Rabindranath used the songs of the mor duar on the night of the film.
The latest survey conducted by a news group in India reveals: The last dialogue of this film is Grandpa, I want to live in a well-known line in Bengali film.
Information
"The Star of Dhaka in Megh (1960)" The New York Times. The date of collection is July 26, 2014.
"Endnotes"। ejumpcut.org। 2005. The date of collection is July 26, 2014.
Rosalind Galt, Karl Schoonover (2010). Global Art Cinema: New Theories and Histories। Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-538562-4.
"2002 Sight & Sound Top Films Survey of 253 International Critics & Film Directors"। cinemacom.com। The date of collection is July 26, 2014.
External Connection
Cloud edited star in Internet Movie Database (English)
The Film of the Spiritual Ghotak - Erin O'Donnell's Analytical Article
Google Image Search: Clouds Covered Stars