GHATSHRADDHA 1977
GIRISH KASARAVALLI
GIRISH KASARAVALLI
SYNOPSIS

An arid emotional state, where people are driven not by warmth and affection but are dispassionate carriers of dry rituals and a bone-dry religious zeal; Girish Kasaravalli’s haunting film “Ghatashraddha” leaves you shaken with its portrayal of a cloistered, traditional Brahmin community. More: the image of the broken pitcher (the culminating act of the Ghatashraddha, the excommunication ritual itself) which coldly proclaims the alive Yamunakka dead, sticks on stubbornly.
Based on the renowned writer U.R. Ananthamurthy’s short story, the film came exactly six years after “Samskara” (1971), which was also based on the writer’s novel by the same name. Both these films critique the conservative Brahmin society, however, “Ghatashraddha” seems the more incisive strike, probably because of the film’s organic-cohesive structure.
The film, largely true to the original, does make a couple of departures from the story. The at once helpless as well as compassionate note on which the film ends is as powerful as the ironic finish of the story.
Throughout the film (/story), you find yourself frantically holding on to the little Naani, just in the way Yamunakka does. Naani – the story teller and observer – who turns out to be the sole, humane element of the community, becomes our point of redemption too.
“Ghatashraddha” tells you a story of the past, but acquires a contemporaneity for the manner in which it faces up with the present. Interestingly, Siddalingaih’s film “Hemavathi” based on Gorur Ramaswamy Iyengar’s novel was also made in the same year. This film too, is a critique of the Brahmin stranglehold, but gets simplified in its hurry to offer solutions.
Like in the greatest of stories, in this story too one sees ruptures coming from within.
It carries in it the ominous forebodings of W.B. Yeats’ poem, “Things fall apart, the centre cannot hold.” The film forcefully puts it in three points of defiance: in Yamunakka, in Naani and in Shastri.
While the first two are more forthright, Shastri is surreptitious and hence susceptible. He hankers to de-canonise and de-mythify (defiling the Nagara Kallu, smoking…), but for fear of alienation, he does it in secrecy. And ironically, the religious order that he so suspects, has successfully dehumanised him.
TECHNICAL DATA
Director: Girish Kasaravalli
Writer: G. Kasaravalli, K.V. Subanna
Cast: Narayan Bhatt, Janganath, Ramswamy Iyengar
Music: B.V.Karanth
Cinematography: S. Ramachandra
Runtime: 120 min. BLACK AND WHITE. Language: Kannada. Spanish Subtitled.