Target

Target

av Sandip Ray

The hunt must go on, cries despotic land owner and big game hunter Singh from atop his elephant. Dressed in a Western European safari suit and with a hip-flask in his hand he is the unrivalled star in today's safari. Nothing can go wrong: with the help of an astrologer he has even calculated when and how the prey will appear in the jungle. One sure bullet is all it takes to bring down the attacking tiger. Singh is then having his photograph taken with the prey. But tigers are not the only ones to fall this day. It turns out that Singh is incapable of holding the gun himself these days. Instead he has hired a shikari, a professional hunter, to do the shooting for him. Bharosaram is a good hunter but belongs to the absolute bottom level of the Indian society, which means he ends up in the labor camp for the ''untouchables''. He is well looked-after by a beautiful woman, Bijri, who soon tells him about the appalling conditions that prevail in the camp: the wages are miserable and they are treated as cattle. At the beginning Bharosaram does not want to know about the things he sees and hears since he himself, as the number one hunter, is well paid by Singh. However, a bloody incident makes him change his mind. But one crushed arm does not stop him from shooting with the other one ... Target is set in the little village of Panporia in contemporary India. By letting the story deal with hunting and prey Sandip Ray mirrors the social problems within the Indian caste system in a multi-dimensional way. Problems which are still acute in certain parts of the country, according to Ray. By using a narrative close to that of a fairy tale, Ray confronts the reality with a backdrop of lies. Singh's glittering mansion is as unreal as the king's castle from Arabian Nights and the circumstances in the labour camp just as cruel as the life of the poor in Robin Hood. This feeling of fairytale is heightened by an acting technique which resembles Commedia dell'arte. Each actor comes to represent a human characteristic: the good, the bad, the ugly etc. Even the visual composition in Target is theatrical. A strong feeling of claustrophobia is created by the repeated use of one or two settings in the village of Panporia and its surroundings. In spite of this the film breathes an invigorating optimism and one can but hope that this is the beginning of a cinematic language growing in India, where the citizens dare to criticize centuries of oppression. YL

Premiärstatus
Nordisk premiär
Medverkande
Om Puri, Mohan Agoshe, Champa
Producent
A.J. Vincent, A.J. Francis, Zachary Lovas, Jason Lovas
Manus
Satyajit Ray, based on the novel by Prafulla Ray
Foto
Barun Raha
Musik
Sandip Ray

 

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