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Detective Byomkesh Bakshi to come alive on screen

Helmer Dibakar Banerjee who was one of the invitees to the Knowledge Series of the just concluded Film Bazaar at IFFI 2014, spoke to HT about his new film Detective Byomkesh Bakshi, based on the legendary character created by Sharadindu Bandhyopadhyay.

Updated on: Nov 25, 2014 03:30 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Panaji
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Dibakar Banerjee works with that precision which people jocularly, sometimes caustically or even angrily, term Indian Standard Time. "I will meet you at 9.30 at the breakfast place," he told over the telephone in Goa's Marriott Hotel. Banerjee appeared for the meeting an hour late, only to find that he had scheduled another with Marco Mueller, Director of the Rome International Film Festival!

He was one of the invitees to the Knowledge Series of the just concluded Film Bazaar which runs along with the ongoing International Film Festival of India in Panaji.

Detective-Byomkesh-Bakshi
Detective-Byomkesh-Bakshi

Eventually Banerjee did get down to talking about his latest movie, Detective Byomkesh Bakshi, which is scheduled to open in February 2015.

A character created by Sharadindu Bandhyopadhyay, Byomkesh appeared in a series of stories between 1932 and 1970, and was often compared to Arthur Conan Doyle's sleuth, Sherlock Holmes. As immortal as Holmes, Bakshi might have been inspired by Doyle's creation, but Bandhyopadhyay's style was extraordinarily Indian - although the genre he used was Western.

"The amazing thing about Byomkesh was that Bandhyopadhyay made his investigator so Indian - even though the format was Western colonial. The characters are so very Bengali, so very Calcuttan," Banerjee informs. "Although people will tend to compare Byomkesh with Holmes, Bakshi is truly a native of the land."

Banerjee who grew up reading the exploits of Holmes and his sidekick, that delightful Dr Watson, was also an avid fan of Byomkesh. Perhaps, it was the early influence of Holmes and Bakshi that steered the director towards crime. Whether it was his debut feature, Khosla Ka Ghosla (2006) or later works like Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye!, Love Sex Aur Dhoka and Shanghai, crime is an underlying factor in all these.

"This is an interesting observation," he says. "Nobody has ever told me this. But you have got me thinking all right. I think crime defines a society. When I was 12 or 13 years old, my friends and I were told never to read Bandhyopadhyay. Sure enough, we all went for him, especially his Byomkesh exploits. His stories, written in a classic and riveting way, spoke about the underbelly of our society, about the darker side of the community. And we found fascinating aspects in the fiction - aspects that differed from the normative. An old man addicted to pornography. A couple kissing each other to death by passing on cyanide, crimes of passion -- and this was the world of Bakshi, and as a teenager, it excited me. And that interest in the dark, in the perverse, in the scandalous is the most sensational part of any civilisation. And it is, therefore, not surprising that every Bengali household should have Bandhyopadhyay's Bakshi Omnibus."

The film, Detective Byomkesh Bakshi, is about the wartime Calcutta of 1943 - a city frightened by a possible Japanese invasion. Calcutta was the only Indian city that saw bombings during that war. It was a very historic time. Gandhi's Quit India Movement was on. Netaji Subash Chandra Bose escaped from his home in Calcutta, giving the slip to the British who had held him under house arrest. The British were under siege. Japan had taken over Singapore, Malaya, Burma and so on.

 
Follow India news real-time updates and the latest news covered on Hindustan Times, featuring today's critical updates on Sonam Wangchuk LIVE and more across India.
Follow India news real-time updates and the latest news covered on Hindustan Times, featuring today's critical updates on Sonam Wangchuk LIVE and more across India.
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