Thought Box

RITUPARNO GHOSH'S ENDURING LEGACY

RITUPARNO GHOSH'S ENDURING LEGACY

by Monojit Lahiri July 1 2026, 12:00 am Estimated Reading Time: 5 mins, 0 secs

Monojit Lahiri does a flashback on his momentous life and times. He reflects on the visionary filmmaker's extraordinary life, groundbreaking cinema, creative brilliance, lasting cultural influence, and the unforgettable personal memories that continue inspiring generations today.

Rituparno Ghosh was a legendary Indian filmmaker, screenwriter, and cultural icon whose thought-provoking cinema revolutionised Bengali and Indian film. Known for masterpieces like Unishe April, Chokher Bali, and Raincoat, Ghosh fused artistic depth with commercial appeal, earning 12 National Film Awards. His storytelling explored complex relationships, gender identity, and human emotions with rare sensitivity. Collaborating with stars like Aishwarya Rai, Amitabh Bachchan, and Aparna Sen, he created a new language of Indian cinema. As we remember Rituparno Ghosh almost a month past his 13th death anniversary, his legacy continues to inspire filmmakers, cinephiles, and cultural thinkers worldwide.

When I got the news, late on the morning of May 30, 2013, from a friend, I was stunned! It was just a few months earlier at the Kolkata Book Fair event where we met and had a brief, warm chat. He was moderating a very interesting programme on Ray's Women, where he was in conversation with such class acts as Madhabi Mukherjee, Aparna Sen, and Sharmila Tagore. Immediately after the programme, he took me aside and whispered wickedly, "Dada, hope you were not too bored with all the inane chatter!"

Witty, smart, clever, charming, articulate, Ritu and I go back to the early nineties when we first met at my sister-in-law Aparna Sen’s place in Alipore, Kolkata. I was living and working out of Delhi, so knew nothing about him. I remember him telling me that he was in advertising too – a copywriter – but his heart was in moviemaking. He had just made a children's film Hirer Aangti, but since he was not well known and it wasn't well marketed, the film made no waves.

At the time we met, he was scripting his first feature film Unishe April, starring Aparna and Debasree Roy in the principal lead roles, and could I please pray that it resonated with the audience? He admitted later – after the film's huge success – that "the contribution of Rina-di (Aparna) and Renu Roy could never be underestimated, because without their morale-boosting support, scripting and dialogue help, and aggressive initiatives in rustling up finances, the film would have remained just that – a day in the calendar!"

The Breakthrough That Changed Bengali Cinema

Unishe April was indeed a mind-blowing experience for audiences in 1994! A totally content-driven film, powered by amazingly crafted dialogue and bereft of any glamour or stereotypical filmy component, this mother-daughter distancing [shades of Bergman's Autumn Sonata?] and bonding scored big, fetching him a National Award and marking the entry of a young, new, bold director with a vision and mission all his own. The film not only got him tons of followers but also garnered huge praise from the press and, most importantly, a National Award for Best Actress (Debasree Roy) and Best Feature Film for him! A century on debut, Ghosh seemed to have made the National Award a habit, winning 12 between 1994–2012 (Chitrangada – Special Jury Award). Definitely a record!

The Genius Behind The Success

What was so special about Rituparno Ghosh? For one, I can't think of any other filmmaker in Bengal who so adroitly fused scholarship with market forces. His advertising background obviously came into play because, right from the way he dreamt up his subject, his casting, his treatment, his publicity, and the way he would present and pitch his work to audiences, he was spot-on.

Secondly, few (if any) could match his deadly (and winning) combination of blending quality with speed and making a small budget look awesome! No wonder, in a space where quality filmmakers continue to desperately look for funds, Ritu had producers forever lining up. Also, hardly any of his films ever lost money. I once asked him why he didn't pay heed to critics accusing him of making films at breakneck speed that looked good but lacked soul. He smiled and pleaded guilty but offered two telling reasons: "Ideas come to me thick and fast and I perhaps, like many others, can pause and take my time, but I don't because I have a unit who need to be gainfully employed and the more prolific I am, the better for them. As for my films being overly concerned with looks, I think cinema is a visual medium and great visuals create their very own magic and fan following. Maybe it's my advertising background or an inherent weakness, but don't we first see and then hear?"

A Filmmaker Who Became Family

Finally, no filmmaker – not Ray, Sen, Ghatak, or later Buddhadeb Dasgupta, Goutam Ghosh, or Aparna Sen – had the kind of seductive charm he possessed to convince people – stars, producers, journalists, critics, intellectuals, ordinary people – to rock with him. Imagine, sitting in Kolkata and persuading the likes of Bollywood A-listers to enthusiastically and happily work in his tiny-budget films. Be it Aishwarya Rai and Ajay Devgn in Raincoat, Aishwarya Rai in Chokher Bali, Manisha Koirala in Khela, Soha Ali Khan and Abhishek Bachchan in Antarmahal, Amitabh Bachchan, Preity Zinta and Arjun Rampal in The Last Lear, or even Sharmila Tagore and Rakhee in Shubho Mahurat, Bipasha Basu in Shob Charitro Kalponik, and Kirron Kher in Bariwali – they all leapt on board with joy.

Intelligent, insightful, evolved, sensitive, extraordinarily well read, aglow with intellectual curiosity, yet sweet, simple, generous, kind, fun, and deeply grounded, Rituparno Ghosh had a ready-made home in every heart he connected with. No wonder, whether it was Aparna Sen, Sharmila Tagore, the Bachchans, Moon Moon Sen, Kirron Kher, or anyone else, Ritu was always referred to as "family". 

Forty-nine years is no age to say goodbye, but hey, thanks for the memories. As for me, on a personal level, I continue to miss those long chats on the phone discussing Cabbages and Kings. Here's to Lights, Camera, Action... upstairs!  




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