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Revisiting Classics (Shemaroo; DVD Rs 199) is a collection of 20 songs from three classic films, Mughal-E-Azam, Pakeezah and Nikaah. This 89-minute DVD features all the Mughal-e-Azam songs in colour. We saw the Azams coloured version after decades, then the DVD of the coloured version film. Now, it has created history again by being premiered in Pakistan, breaking 40-year ice. The two bonus films add up to push the adrenaline.
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Chokh (Angel; VCD Rs 299) is a story set during
Emergency, December 1975. The story, script and direction
is by Utpalendu Chakraborty. Its about a labour union
leader, Om Puri, who has been given capital punishment.
Before death he voices his wish that his eyes should be
donated to a blind worker. But as soon as the news of his
donation becomes known, the powerful jute mill owner starts
using his clout to get both the eyes for his blind son.
The doctor, Anil Chatterjee, probes to find the truth and
if the papers provided by the jute mill owner have been
doctored. The workers along with the dead leaders
widow brings out a protest rally against this injustice
ensuing a renewed struggle. Symbolically, the fight goes
on.
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Ek Mutho Chhobi (Shradha; VCD Rs 199, DVD Rs 299)
is a unique venture in Bengali cinema, quite on the
lines of RGVs experimental Darna Mana Hai and
the forthcoming Darna Zaroori Hai. Here too are six
stories, six directors, one film as says the tagline. Each
of the six stories highlights some basic human emotion such
as lust, greed,obsession, pride and jealousy. Argyakamal
Mitras Janmodin, Partha Sens Pakshiraj,
Indranil Roychowdhurys Tapan Babu, Prabhat
Roys Ragun Babur Galpo, Anjan Duttas
Tarpor Bhalobasha and Kaushik Gangulys Progress
Report make up the package of six.
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Byomkesh Bakshi is as popular a detective as Satyajit Rays
Feluda in Bengali fiction. In Chiriakhana (Angel;
VCD Rs 299, DVD 399), Ray films a murder mystery based
on Saradindu Bandopadhyays Satyaneshi Byomkesh.
This is a gripping tale that involves a long-forgotten actress
who had shot to fame with a film and a song sung in her
own voice. After she became the prime suspect in a murder
case she went into hiding and was never heard of thereafter.
A retired judge suspecting her presence in his colony appoints
Byomkesh. Soon some more dead bodies and scandals come tumbling
out of the closet. Ray saw Byomkesh Bakshi in none other
than Uttam Kumar and quite rightly so. Uttam Kumar is excellent
in the character of Byomkesh onscreen, witty yet unassuming,
very sharp, a master of disguise, and with an uncanny power
of sensing the truth.
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