Aastha: In the Prison of Spring explained

Aastha: is the person who is loved by aman
Director:Basu Bhattacharya
Producer:Basu Bhattacharya
Starring:Rekha
Om Puri
Dinesh Thakur
Navin Nischol
Daisy Irani
Music:Shaarang Dev
Lyrics:
Gulzar
Cinematography:Khokon Bhaduri
Dilip Ranjan Mukhopadhyay (also director of photography)
Editing:Shailesh Shetye
Distributor:Aarohi Film Makers
Runtime:132 minutes[1]
Country:India
Language:Hindi

Aastha: In the Prison of Spring is a 1997 Bollywood film, produced and directed by Basu Bhattacharya.The film stars Rekha, Om Puri, Navin Nischol and Daisy Irani in the main roles. The film went on to receive both critical acclaim and commercial success, the latter of which had eluded Basu in his last few films. Subsequently, spurred on by this success, Basu was even planning to remake the film in English, though he died in June 1997, at the age 62.[2] The film's success was described as blurring the gap between Indian art and commercial cinema, where art film makers, dealing with serious issues, used a musical format to make the film more commercially appealing, thus reaching a wider audience.[3] Rekha received a nomination of 1997 Star Screen Award for Best Actress.[4]

In the movie, Rekha had the controversial role of a married woman who turns into a prostitute, which was severely criticized by the audience.[5] About her role in the movie, Rekha said, "After 'Aastha: In the Prison of Spring' people had a lot to say about my role of a wife who moonlights as a prostitute. I don't have problems playing anything. I've reached a stage where I could do justice to any role that came my way. It could be role of a mother, a sister-in-law; negative, positive, sensational or anything."[6]

The movie is remarkable for its explicit love scenes.[7]

Plot summary

Mansi (Rekha) and Amar (Om Puri) have been married for years, and have a daughter by this marriage. Amar is employed full-time, while Mansi looks after the household chores and their daughter. Amar earns a steady income, which enables the family to live comfortably, but they cannot afford to be extravagant at all. One day while buying shoes for her daughter, Mansi realizes that shoes are really expensive, and wants to leave the store without purchasing them. Another woman customer named Reena (Daisy Irani) offers to pay for the shoes, as she feels sorry for Mansi. Mansi reluctantly accepts Reena's offer to pay for the shoes, not realizing that Reena has paid for these shoes with a secret agenda that will open a new door in Mansi's life dragging her to prostitution to satisfy materialistic and sexual needs. The rest of the movie shows her trying to get out of this arrangement, until finally she uses one of Amar's students' help to inform him about the situation.[8]

Themes

The film was seen as follow up of the noted trilogy Basu Bhattacharya made around marital discord in the 1970s, with Anubhav (1971), Avishkaar (1973) and Griha Pravesh (1979). Aastha turned out to be Basu's last movie, and is set again in the institution of marriage, although here Basu illustrates his response to the growing materialism in the 1990s and explores its impact on modern, urban marriage, as well as moral values.[9] A bored and restless housewife, who has a young school-going daughter, awakens to her sexuality post mid-life, and in the process falls into the trap of prostitution. She wants material comforts (consumerism) and finds her professor husband's (Om Puri) income inadequate for it. She agrees to have a liaison with another man (Navin Nischol), in exchange for gifts and money, in the absence of her husband, who is shown as being highly principled. Though later, she is unable to reconcile with the new reality, as guilt and remorse regarding her choices, soon overshadow the joys of her few found comforts and sexual escapades.[2] [10] [11]

It remains one of few films in Bollywood, which explore a woman's sexuality outside marriage,[12] [13]

Cast

Actor/Actress Role
RekhaMansi
Om PuriAmar
Dinesh ThakurDinesh
Anwesha BhattacharyaAmita
Daisy IraniReena
Navin NischolMr. Dutt
Shruti PatelNeeti

Soundtrack

The soundtrack is composed by Shaarang Dev with the lyrics penned by Gulzar.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: In the Prison of Spring - Aastha (1997). BBFC. 10 May 2016.
  2. News: Basuda, auteur of "sensitive" films dies at 62. 21 June 1997. Indian Express.
  3. Book: Morcom, Anna . Hindi film songs and the cinema. 2007. Ashgate Publishing. 978-0-7546-5198-7.
  4. News: And the nominees for 1997 are.... 9 January 1998. Indian Express.
  5. News: Bollywood's grand 'young' style diva. 12 October 2007. The Tribune. 24 July 2010.
  6. Web site: At 53, Rekha is still Bollywood's style diva . 2010-04-04 . 2007-11-10 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071212080348/http://bihartimes.com/news07/Oct/11ten6.html . 12 December 2007 .
  7. News: HOT STUFF: Charting body behaviour in Hindi cinema. Bhattacharya. Roshmila. 25 April 2003. Screen. 24 July 2010.
  8. Book: Muthukumaraswamy, M. D. . Molly Kaushal. Folklore, public sphere, and civil society. 2004. National Folklore Support Centre (India) (NFSC). 81-901481-4-1. 132.
  9. Book: Gulzar . Encyclopaedia of Hindi cinema. Gulzar . Govind Nihalani, Saibal Chatterjee . 2003. (Encyclopædia Britannica (India) Pvt. Ltd), Popular Prakashan. 81-7991-066-0 . 532 .
  10. News: Straying spouses caught in reel. 12 November 2006. The Tribune. 24 July 2010.
  11. News: Dangerous liaisons. Vaidyanathan. Dr PV. 16 January 2004. Screen.
  12. Book: Misra, Geetanjali . Radhika Chandiramani. Sexuality, gender and rights: exploring theory and practice in South and Southeast Asia . 2005. SAGE. 0-7619-3403-0.
  13. News: Lovers and Liars. 27 April 2004. The Times of India.