Draft:Shatru (1984 film)
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Shatru | |
---|---|
Directed by | Anjan Choudhury |
Screenplay by | Anjan Choudhury |
Dialogues by | Anjan Choudhury |
Story by | Anjan Choudhury |
Produced by | Ravindra Aggarwal |
Starring | Ranjit Mallick Manoj Mitra Subhodip Roy Chowdhury Shakuntala Barua Anup Kumar Chiranjeet Chakraborty Bikash Roy Prosenjit Chatterjee Mahua Roy Chowdhury |
Cinematography | Bijoy Ghosh |
Edited by | Baidyanath Chatterjee |
Music by |
|
Production company | Aggarwal Films Pvt. Ltd. |
Distributed by | Trio Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 132 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Bengali |
Shatru (transl. Enemy) is a 1984 Bengali-language action crime film written and directed by Anjan Choudhury in his directorial debut. Produced by Ravindra Aggarwal under the banner of Aggarwal Films, the film is based on Choudhury's own serialised story of the same name published for his edited weekly magazine Chumki. It stars Ranjit Mallick, Manoj Mitra, Shakuntala Barua and Subhodip Roy Chowdhury in lead roles, while Anup Kumar, Chiranjeet Chakraborty, Bikash Roy, Biplab Chatterjee and Nirmal Ghosh play another pivotal roles, with Dilip Roy, Prosenjit Chatterjee, Mahua Roy Chowdhury and Jayshree T in special appearances.
Initially titled as Hobo Itihaash (transl. I will be the history), the film marks the first of the frequent collaborations between Choudhury and Mallick. It is also the only collaboration between Choudhury and Chiranjeet Chakraborty, with making the cinematic debut of Subhodip Roy Chowdhury, credited in the film as Master Tapu. Songs of the film are composed by Dilip-Dilip, while V. Balsara provided its score. The cinematography of the film is handled by Bijoy Ghosh and editing was by Baidyanath Chatterjee.
Shatru was theatrically released on 7 December 1984, after a lengthy battle of the makers with the Central Board of Film Certification over a few scenes in the film that allegedly glorified violence. Opening to huge positive reviews, the film became a blockbuster at the box-office and ran for over 90 weeks in theatres. Gaining a cult status in the history of Bengali cinema, Shatru established Mallick's new image of "The Vigilante Hero". The character Subhankar Sanyal played by him, was later re-used by Choudhury in Jibon Niye Khela (1999), one of their later collaborations.
Shatru was remade under the same title into Hindi by Pramod Chakravorty in 1986, starring Rajesh Khanna. In 2011, it was felicitated in and cited to be an inspiration by Raj Chakraborty for his directorial Shotru starring Jeet.
Cast
[edit]- Ranjit Mallick as Subhankar Sanyal, the officer-in-charge of Haridebpur
- Manoj Mitra as Nishikanta Saha
- Shakuntala Barua as Asha
- Subhodip Roy Chowdhury (credited as Master Tapu) as Chhottu
- Anup Kumar as SI Haradhan Banerjee
- Chiranjeet Chakraborty as ASI Alok Chakraborty
- Bikash Roy as Nihar Ranjan Chowdhury, MLA of Haridebpur
- Biplab Chatterjee as Abdul, Nishikanta's right hand-man
- Nirmal Ghosh as Paran Mondal, Chhottu's father and a farmer formerly worked for Nishikanta
- Shambhu Bhattacharya as the former officer-in-charge of Haridebpur
- Sandeep Choudhury (credited as Master Sandeep) as Haru
- Chumki Choudhury as Madhu's friend
- Rina Choudhury as Nihar's daughter and Bapi's sister
- Debnath Chatterjee as Bhola, Subhankar's servant
- Ajit Chatterjee as Kalu, Nishikanta's henchman
- Keshab Banerjee as Madan, Nishikanta's henchman
Special appearance
- Dilip Roy as SP
- Prosenjit Chatterjee as Bapi, Nihar's son
- Mahua Roy Chowdhury as Madhu
- Jayshree T as dancer in the song "Naksha Koro Naa Raja"
Production
[edit]Development
[edit]When Anjan Choudhury was working as a film critic and journalist for his own weekly magazine Chumki (titled after her elder daughter's name), he serially published his first two stories in 1979. One of these was Hobo Itihaash, inspired by the political violence in the late 70s, which caught Subhendu Chatterjee's attention. Then Chatterjee decided to make his directorial debut by adapting it and approached Choudhury to be associated with the film as its screenwriter. Choudhury, who had already made his debut as a screenwriter in the 1977 film Teer Bhanga Dheu,[1] agreed to Chatterjee's proposal. At a time when political films in Bengali cinema were made in dramatic nature excluding Pijush Basu's Bagh Bondi Khela (1975), Chatterjee saw the script as potentially groundbreaking and planned to treat it as an action film, whereas the story was written as a crime film and protagonist Subhankar Sanyal was conceived as a hard-hitting, "angry with the system" policeman.
However, both Chatterjee and Choudhury were struggling to find an actor for the lead "angry young man" role, which was turned down by Soumitra Chatterjee and Samit Bhanja, as both of them found themselves to be improper. Despite having proper physique, Soumitra Chatterjee, whom the role was first offered, disagreed to sign the film because of his commitments with other projects as the film needed a lot of workshops especially for the action sequences. Eventually, it went to Uttam Kumar,[2][3] who was pursuaded by Choudhury, a big fan of the former. Later, they planned to bring Suchitra Sen as its female lead, denoting her comeback after Pronoy Pasha (1978) and also the return of her pair with Kumar, five years after Priyo Bandhobi (1975). But Sen, who was in a hiatus then, turned down the offer as the character didn't impressed him and also it was a widow, which she disagreed to play. Then Shakuntala Barua was roped in that role.
Mithun Chakraborty was offered an important character by Kumar's advise, and Prosenjit Chatterjee was signed to play a negative character, both of whom were then acting and working as an assistant director under Kumar's supervision respectively in his directorial Kalankini Kankabati (1981), while Chakraborty later came out of it and was replaced by Santu Mukherjee. Utpal Dutt was approached to play the antagonist, while he adviced Subhendu Chatterjee to find a new actor to play the role. Inspite of several workshops having been taken place for the action sequences, one of which included a high-octane hand-to-hand combat between Kumar and Prosenjit Chatterjee, Kumar himself showed his interest to play the villain instead of the protagonist. At first, both Chatterjee and Choudhury disagreed to his proposal, but later nodded and Ranjit Mallick came on the board as the protagonist.
The shooting of the film was to begin in September 1980, after the completion of Uttam Kumar and Ranjit Mallick's commitments with other films. On 23 July 1980, Kumar had his third time heart attack during the shooting of Ogo Bodhu Shundori (1981), and he died on 24 July at 9:30 pm. After these circumstances, Chatterjee came out of the project and ultimately Hobo Itihaash got shelved. Later in 1983, Anjan Choudhury decided to make the film in his directorial debut and renamed the film as Shatru. Ravindra Aggarwal, who gave his consent to produce the film, wanted to do the film in Hindi with Shatrughan Sinha, while Choudhury was at his decision to do it with Mallick.
Casting
[edit]Soundtrack
[edit]Songs of the film are composed by Dilip Ganguly and Dilip Basu of the music director duo Dilip-Dilip, while background score is provided by V. Balsara, in his first collaboration with Anjan Choudhury. The album contains three songs and a score, penned by Choudhury himself and Pulak Bandyopadhyay.
No. | Title | Lyrics | Music | Singer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Theme of Shatru (instrumental)" | V. Balsara | 2:10 | ||
2. | "Bol Bol Bol Bol Naa Tupi Kake Porai" | Anjan Choudhury | Dilip-Dilip | Amit Kumar | 4:35 |
3. | "Naksha Koro Naa Go Raja" | Pulak Bandyopadhyay | Dilip-Dilip | Haimanti Shukla | 4:08 |
4. | "Bolo Naa Go Kar Maa Tumi" | Anjan Choudhury | Dilip-Dilip | Aarti Mukherjee | 3:52 |
Total length: | 14:45 |
References
[edit]- ^ "Bilingual E-archive Digital Platform for Bengal's Cinema". Bengal Film Archive. Retrieved 2025-04-17.
- ^ Chatterji, Souvik (2010-06-28). "Station Hollywood: Shatru was the first hit film of 80s". Station Hollywood. Retrieved 2025-04-18.
- ^ Roy Chowdhury, Shantanu (2023-04-19). "Ranjit Mallick: 'I do films for two reasons – to provide a moral compass to the viewer and for them to laugh'". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2025-04-18.
Breaking the fourth wall, the 'hero' says his name is Ranjit Mallick and that he is just a common man who has allowed Mrinal Sen, 'the guy who makes movies', to film him as he goes about his day preparing for the interview.