Jatinga Ityadi

Jatinga Ityadi

Poster of the film
Directed by Sanjib Sabhapandit
Produced by Rajkamal Bhuyan
Screenplay by Sanjib Sabhapandit
Story by Sanjib Sabhapandit
Starring Bishnu Khargharia
Bina Patangia
Saurabh Hazarika
Music by Dipak Sarma
Cinematography Parasher Barua
Edited by Manas Adhikari
Production
company
Ruchira Arts Private Ltd.
Release dates
2007
Running time
124 minutes
Country India
Language Assamese
Budget 40 lakhs

Jatinga Ityadi (Assamese: জাতিঙ্গা ইত্যাদি) is an Assamese language film directed by Sanjib Sabhapandit. The film was screened in the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) 2007 in the Indian Panorama section. The film depicts the current scenario of militancy in Assam.[1][2]

Plot

A British couple visits Assam looking for the graveyard of the man’s grandfather who was once a tea planter. With a view to drawing international attention, an underground rebel group kidnaps the couple. But being unable to communicate with the foreign couple, the outfit picks up an educated but frustrated youth who is fluent in English. Eager to be a part of that so-called "movement" of the group, the boy readily jumps in. But inside the hideout, Manab, the protagonist, discovers that the idea he had of the militant group and its "struggle for independence" was entirely wrong. He decides to help the British couple escape. In the process he is killed in a crossfire with all the militants present in the scene.[1]

Title of the film

Main article: Jatinga

Speaking about the significance of the film title, Sabhapadit informed that Jatinga is a small place in Assam where birds are said to commit suicide. But this is not the case - birds do not actually commit suicide, they are lured to death. At night, people hold bamboo torches to attract these birds and when they fly close, they are clubbed to death. Same way in the guise of a revolution the boys are lured into a death trap. Drawing a similarity between the birds and the youth, he chose that title for his movie.[2]

Cast

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Kashyap, Samudra Gupta (22 October 2007). "Film on ULFA script going haywire makes it to Indian Panorama". Guwahati: Indianexpress. Retrieved 22 January 2010.
  2. 1 2 PTI (2 December 2007). "Extremism in NE has lost relevance: Sabhapandit". Panaji: The Hindu. Retrieved 22 January 2010.

External links


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