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Bengali film stories that shaped generations and still move hearts today

Sonal Khandelwal
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 29, 2025, 06:00 IST
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1/5

Pratidwandi (1970)

Pratidwandi follows Siddhartha, an educated youth drifting through job interviews and political protests in a restless Calcutta. Satyajit Ray shot parts of the film in stark, documentary style, mirroring Siddhartha’s confusion and anger. Released in 1970, it captured the disillusionment of an entire generation. Even today, his uneasy glances on the tram feel familiar to anyone juggling expectations, unemployment and half formed dreams. It asks quietly what success really means.

2/5

Dahan (1997)

In Dahan, a young schoolteacher stands up to a public assault in 90s Kolkata, and her life unravels when society refuses to back her courage. Based on a real incident and directed by Rituparno Ghosh, the film won a National Award for exposing everyday misogyny. Its bruised eyes, whispered conversations and stubborn hope still feel painfully, urgently current. For many viewers, it named fears they had silently carried for years.

3/5

Apur Sansar (1959)

Apur Sansar returns to Apu as a struggling writer in the city, suddenly married to spirited Aparna and then left alone with their child. The final part of the Apu Trilogy, it gave Soumitra Chatterjee his debut and a lifelong partnership with Satyajit Ray. That tender last scene on the river, father and son reuniting, still makes grown audiences cry without a single manipulative gesture. Just forgiveness, mud, and distance.

4/5

Kabuliwala (1957)

Kabuliwala brings Tagore’s short story to life through the unlikely friendship between a homesick Afghan dry fruit seller and a little Bengali girl. Their shared jokes and tiny rituals slowly reveal his longing for the daughter he left behind. The 1957 film, with Balraj Sahni’s heartbreaking performance, turned the word Kabuliwala into a symbol of migrant tenderness, proving children often understand grief better than the adults around them, even today.

5/5

Padatik (1973)

Padatik follows a young political activist hiding in a safe house, forced to confront the human cost of revolution. Directed by Mrinal Sen, it completed his Calcutta trilogy and dared to criticise both the State and the radicals he once admired. Long conversations, cramped rooms and street scenes show how ideology seeps into daily life, quietly asking where resistance ends and responsibility to loved ones begins for each restless generation.

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Copyright © Jun 7, 2026, 04.31PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service