Director Sandip Ray opens up about carrying the legacy of father Satyajit, and what he has in store for 'Feluda'

Being the son of a 'legend' has its merits as well as demerits feels the filmmaker.

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Satyajit Ray's son Sandip has managed to carve a niche in the Bengali film industry. He is mostly known for the hit 'Feluda' series.
Living up to the legacy of legendary movie maker and author Satyajit Ray is a tough call for anyone.

For his son, the 69-year-old film director, Sandip Ray, best known for the series of detective movies he has made based on his father's popular series of books on the quintessential private investigator Prodosh Mitter alias 'Feluda', the challenge to emerge from Satyajit Ray's shadow as he accepts with a smile, is "daunting".

"It's daunting ... but at the same time you have to work. There are plus points and there are minus points (of being a famous director's son)," Sandip Ray told PTI.


The younger Ray who started out life as an assistant to his father, made his debut film 'Phatik Chand' at the age of 30. Since then, he has made more than two dozen movies and tele-films, including a series of movies on 'Feluda'.

Satyajit Ray made 'Sonar Kella' (Golden Fortress), the first 'Feluda' thriller, in 1974 after having become internationally acclaimed for sensitive films such as the Apu trilogy, the Calcutta trilogy, 'Aranyer Din Ratri' (Days & Nights in the Forest) and 'Nayak' (Hero).

'Sonar Kella', an adaption of Ray's book for young adults by the same name, starring Soumitra Chatterjee as the detective 'Feluda' and Santosh Dutta as the bumbling author and Feluda's companion- 'Jatayu', was shot in the Rajasthan desert. It was an instant box-office hit and picked up a large number of national and international awards.
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Ray made one more movie in the Feluda series - 'Joy Baba Felunath' (The Elephant God) - which too was critically acclaimed and was a popular hit.

There has been no looking back after that as the series was carried forward by the younger Ray, who came up with many successful films including 'Tintorettor Jishu' (Tintoretto's Jesus), 'Baksho Rohoshyo' (Box Mystery), 'Kailashe Kelenkari' (Scandal at Kailash) and 'Badhshahi Angti' (the Emperor's Ring).

"I love making movies on Feluda ... I love the stories, the characters, the intrigues ... I (also) love making films for young adults," explained Sandip Ray.

The latest from the series which he will be releasing with a totally new cast is 'Hatyapuri' (House of Death), based on murder mystery at the sea-side town of Puri.
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"There was a gap between the last Feluda movie (2016) and this latest offering ... Covid had much to do with that. But the choice of Puri was dictated by a lot of nostalgia and memories. My father used to love the place and wrote many of his scripts there," the director explained.

Till now, the younger Ray had plumbed mostly for the tall, pockmarked, sharp-eyed Sabyasachi Chakrabarty as Feluda, but this time he has chosen a younger actor, Indraneil Sengupta, who had earlier essayed the role of Kiriti, another well-known detective from Bengali fiction.
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He had also cast Abir Chatterjee as Feluda for 'Badshahi Angti' but seemingly preferred Sabyasachi and now Indraneil for the detective's job.

"It's very difficult to choose a 'Feluda' ... something like choosing a new James Bond," said Sandip Ray with a twinkle in his eyes.

"However, in Indraneil's case, he wanted to play Feluda and had asked me many years back ... but at that time Benu (Sabyasachi) was Feluda and I did not think of a change. This time around, when I was preparing to make the movie, I asked him and he promptly agreed, dropping his role as Kiriti to opt for this movie," he explained.

Another director-actor Abhijeet Guha has been press-ganged into playing 'Jatayu', replacing Bibhu Bhattacharya. "Memories of these iconic characters 'Feluda', 'Jatayu' ... and Sandip Ray as director drew me to do the movie... ," Guha told PTI.

Over the years, Sandip Ray has come to be known for his own versatile talents, both as a film director, a script-writer and as editor of a popular Bengali children's magazine 'Sandesh', launched 110 years back by his family.

While agreeing that comparisons with his father would be unfair, veteran film scholar and critic Shoma A Chatterji, rates the younger Ray as a "consistent film-maker which is rare for the Bengali movie industry, making wholesome, entertaining, family films".

"His music stands out as very good," Chatterji, a National Film Award-winning critic said. The younger Ray has possibly taken after his father in that, feel critics.

The great care taken with the background score which draws on the original Satyajit Ray detective movies and yet is very different, possibly heightens the sense of suspense in Sandip Ray's 'Feluda' movies, attracting his audience to an ultimate thrilling end.
5 Satyajit Ray Classics That Remain Timeless
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In his approximately 43 years of film-making career, Satyajit Ray donned many hats.

His contribution to India as a director, music composer, screenplay writer, illustrator and author has been remarkable.

After dedicating his life to a total of 36 movies, the Bharat Ratna awardee was also fêted with the Dadasaheb Phalke Award in 1984, among other international honours.

On his 98th birth anniversary, here are some of his greatest films that you should add to your must-watch list.
In his approximately 43 years of film-making career, Satyajit Ray donned many hats. His contribution to India as a director, music composer, screenplay writer, illustrator and author has been remark..
Read More

In 1955, Satyajit Ray made his directorial debut with the classic 'Pather Panchali' (Song of the Road).



Based on the novel of Bibhutibhushan Bandopadhyay, the movie shows the struggles of a character named Apu and his poor family living in a rural ancestral home. Due to the unavailability of money, Apu's family experiences joy, poverty, hunger, grief and even death.



The other movies from Apu's life are 'Aparajito' (The Unvanquished) and 'Apur Sansar' (The World of Apu), released in 1956 and 1959, respectively.



Ray's most-famous film was made on a restricted budget of merely Rs 1,50,000, and in a span of three years. This first in 'Apu' trilogy has become the only Indian movie to make it to the BBC's 100 best foreign language films list in 2018, and won the 1956 Cannes award for 'Best Human Document'.

In 1955, Satyajit Ray made his directorial debut with the classic 'Pather Panchali' (Song of the Road).Based on the novel of Bibhutibhushan Bandopadhyay, the movie shows the struggles of a character ..
Read More

Released in 1966, 'Nayak' (The Hero) was Satyajit Ray's second original screenplay after his 1962 movie 'Kanchenjungha'.



Shot inside a train, the movie is about a 24-hour train journey where a young journalist (played by Sharmila Tagore), interviews a famous movie star (played by Uttam Kumar) for her magazine. As the story progresses, the bond between the two develops, and the journalist understands the lonely man behind his fame.



The same year, the Bengali movie bagged the Critics' Prize at the Berlin International Film Festival. It also received a National Award for the 'Best Feature Film' category in 1967.

Released in 1966, 'Nayak' (The Hero) was Satyajit Ray's second original screenplay after his 1962 movie 'Kanchenjungha'.Shot inside a train, the movie is about a 24-hour train journey where a young j..
Read More

Greatly inspired by Rabindranath Tagore's novel, Satyajit Ray wanted to direct Ghare Baire (The Home and the World) for the longest time. The director had written the initial draft of the script in 1940s.



It took Ray one year to complete the film with a lot of help from his son Sandip in handling the camera as the director suffered a heart attack.



Set in 1907 during the Bengal partition, the story revolves around a love triangle, when a landowner's wife falls in love with his close friend. After the landlord finds out about it, he gives his wife the freedom to follow her heart as she should have a life inside and outside home.



The movie bagged 3 National Awards for 'Best Feature Film', 'Best Supporting Actor' - Biswajit Dutt, and 'Best Costume Design' at the 32nd National Film Awards.

Greatly inspired by Rabindranath Tagore's novel, Satyajit Ray wanted to direct Ghare Baire (The Home and the World) for the longest time. The director had written the initial draft of the script in 1..
Read More

Based on writer Munshi Premchand's short story, Satyajit Ray directed 'Shatranj Ke Khilari' (The Chess Players) in 1977. It was his only Hindi film production.


Set during the eve of 1857's rebellion, the movie is about two wealthy Nawabs who get overthrown by the East India Company. The noblemen are obsessed with chess, and focus all their energies on it. More so, the men flee to a village leaving behind their families and kingdom.


Ray's first and only feature film in Hindi language had a talented star cast - Sanjeev Kumar, Shabana Azmi, Saeed Jaffrey, Farida Jalal, Amjad Khan, Victor Banerjee, Farooq Sheikh and Tom Alter. Veteran actor Amitabh Bachchan was the narrator of the movie.

Based on writer Munshi Premchand's short story, Satyajit Ray directed 'Shatranj Ke Khilari' (The Chess Players) in 1977. It was his only Hindi film production. Set during the eve of 1857's ..
Read More

Based on a children's story by Satyajit Ray’s grandfather Upendra Kishore Roychowdhury, 'Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne' (The Adventures of Goopy and Bagha) remains an all-time classic. In this musical journey, a singer and drummer are granted with three wishes from the King of Ghosts. Ray was unable to shoot the film in colour as it was difficult for him to arrange finance.



The series also included sequels like 'Hirak Rajar Deshe' (1980) and 'Goopy Bagha Phire Elo' (1992). The latter was written by Ray himself, but was directed by his son, Sandip.



Inspired by Ray's musical fantasy after a period of 51 years, the animated-version of the film by director Shilpa Ranade released on 1 March earlier this year.

Based on a children's story by Satyajit Ray’s grandfather Upendra Kishore Roychowdhury, 'Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne' (The Adventures of Goopy and Bagha) remains an all-time classic. In this musical journe..
Read More
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