Login Register
Follow Us

The magic of Madhumati

Madhumati marked a milestone in Indian cinema.

Show comments

Shoma A. Chatterji

  

Madhumati marked a milestone in Indian cinema. The film, which heralded several elements within cinema, was an offbeat track Bimal Roy took from his usual oeuvre of making beautiful adaptations from Bengali literature. It was as if he had challenged himself to make a film following the commercial formula, which turned out to be a boxoffice success. 

The film bagged 11 Filmfare Awards, a record that remained unbroken for many years. Filmfare introduced the Best Cinematography Award the same year. Dilip Gupta won it for his mind-blowing cinematography. It remains the biggest boxoffice hit under the Bimal Roy Films banner. Students of cinematography consider the film a model lesson in black-and-white cinematography. K.K. Jaiswal, a faculty member of the FTII, Pune, saw Madhumati 14 times in a row as a student at the institute. “The picturisation of two songs “Suhana safar” and “Aaja re pardesi” is next to impossible in terms of perfection,” he says. It was impossible to say which shot was taken indoors and which was shot outdoors, especially when the scene was supposed to be representing the exterior ambience. The hilly landscape with clouds dotting the skies is beautifully juxtaposed against the eerie mansion that forms the epicentre of the drama.

Music director Shantanu Moitra, points out that, in “Suhana safar”, the arrangement and the sound go hand in hand, the chirping of birds, the use of flute and the unmistakable ‘ohoho’ which is like “an echo in the valley,” followed immediately by a line that highlights the concept of paradise (“Yeh aasma jhuk raha hai zameen par”).

“These are changing times,” he laments, “and it is a struggle today to convince directors on a good tune and many of the songs picturised never manage to scrape past the ear. The late Kishore Chatterjee, one of the best scholars and critics of western classical music, in his paper Mozart and Madhumati, states, “I am fairly convinced that Salil Chowdhury had studied Mozart’s allegros carefully before composing [‘Bichhua’]... The fugue in Mozart’s Jupiter symphony finale is present in the faster portions of this song.”

Madhumati is one of the first films in Indian cinema to deal with ghosts, reincarnation and revenge for wrongs done to a pair of lovers in the past avenged in the present. It created an intriguing ambience with the mansion that has the right touch of eerie intrigue where the ending, beginning, with thrills and ascending suspense, from a subtle beginning to an electrifying climax. It begins when Anand, coming to take charge as the new estate manager, finds his journey blocked by heavy thunder and rains on the way. He steps into the mansion and is struck by memories he did not know he had. “Yahan par ek tasveer thee, jo maine banayi thee”, he says without thinking. Ugranarayan feels panic rising within him when Anand finds a painting of someone who looks exactly like himself. 

Madhumati, played very expressively by Vyjayantimala pitted against Dilip Kumar, is a tribal girl from the hills who believes in superstition. “Mat jao Babu” she tells Anand when the flower falls off and she considers it a bad omen. Anand finds out another young beauty named Madhu, who looks exactly like Madhumati, and requests her to step in to frighten the villainous landlord Raja Ugranarayan (Pran, at his histrionic best) who is captivated by the beauty of Madhumati.

This marks the presence of adequate masala for a mainstream film — a ghost, a love story, a reincarnation factor, alcoholism, traditional medicine, tribal song and dance numbers, comedy in the shape of Johnny Walker with the unforgettable song — “jungle mein more naacha kisine na dekha”, romance between two social, caste and class unequals, and much more.

In 2004, some music lovers did a survey of top 25 albums of individual choices. Madhumati topped the list followed by Guide, Pyaasa and Hum Dono. When 

Madhumati was released, Radio Ceylon played seven songs from Madhumati among its Top 10.

The “Suhana safar” number is sung by Anand (Dilip Kumar) when the film opens. He is fascinated by the beauty of the hillscapes when he has not loved and lost and the “toote hue khwaabon ne” that he sings towards the end of the film. Mukesh sang “suhana safar”, one of his career-bests, and the latter by Mohammed Rafi, though the character lip-synching the songs is the same.

Bollywood created several clones of Madhumati, including Om Shanti Om (2015) starring Shah Rukh Khan and Deepika Padukone. Bimal Roy’s daughter reportedly threatened the producers for plagiarisaton, which was silenced with an out-of-court settlement. But Om Shanti Om is actually a present-day tribute to Madhumati.

Show comments
Show comments

Top News

View All

CSIR develops compact, low-cost tractor for small farmers to replace bullock plough

Compact tractor can undertake farming work in a fraction of the time taken by tradition bullock plough

Ludhiana: Pushed off train, Jammu youth’s Army dreams dashed

GRP lodge FIR after month, kin rue delay

Indian electrician wins Rs 2.25 crore jackpot in Dubai

Nagendrum Borugadda, from Andhra Pradesh, has been saving AED 100 with National Bonds through direct debit since 2019

After ‘popcorn rocks’, NASA now spots ‘potato’ in space, calls it ‘space potato’

According to a June 18 post on the official NASA website, after months of driving, Perseverance arrived at ‘Bright Angel’, discovering oddly textured rock unlike any the rover has seen before

Meta AI rolls out in India on WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram

With this, people can use Meta AI in feeds and chats across its apps to get things done, create content, and deep dive into topics, without having to leave the app they are using

Most Read In 24 Hours

1

2024 T20 Cricket World Cup

Jay Shah announces Rs 125 crore prize money for Team India