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(aka "Eternal Thirst" or "The Thirsty One" or "Thirst")
directed
by Guru Dutt
India 1957
Part social commentary, part morality tale, part portrait of
the artist, and part hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold tract, Guru Dutt, with his
1957 feature, Pyaasa (The Thirst), has delivered equal parts style and content
in harmonious application. Undertaking the lead role, the director plays the
part of Vijay, a poet come upon hard times, who while teetering on the brink
of self-destructive despair, flails against a post-Partition India where
society, intoxicated by the allure of materialistic fulfillment, has succumbed
to cynicism. An anonymous street singer (Dutt’s wife, Geeta Dutt) articulates
the work’s unifying theme, “Slake the thirst that lies deep in my soul.” This
ravaged India is revealed in many ways as a Wasteland. The societal
infrastructure has crumbled, and the thirst that pervades cannot be assuaged
with chemical spirit or other material satiation.
Meena (Mala Sinha), who for Vijay was both his love and his poetic muse during
their college days, left him for better material prospects, after which his
mirage of a life of idyllic pastures dissipated. As a result, Vijay’s poetry
became increasingly dark and heavy, and in exchange for his bliss-tinted
blinders, he acquired a worm’s eye view of the world. While this perspective
yielded insights into the surrounding social malaise, the myopic Vijay
remained unaware of how much he was still a part of it.
Many Messianic references abound, with Vijay postured as a Christ figure, and
with his sufferings meant to take on greater proportions. Continually, he does
not blame individuals, but rather the society that so compels them. Fitting
with the Christian symbolism, it is in the margins of the social system,
amongst the disenfranchised (those denied human civility), where corruption is
less widespread and where humanity may manifest itself most purely. Thus, it
is a prostitute named Gulab (Waheeda Rehman), who truly recognizes the poet’s
worth. While she reveals her love for him, gained through her love for his
poetry, he can only see her as a poor creature to be pitied, and looks to
Meena as his one love.
While Vijay is certainly the agent of much social commentary, he does not
escape the larger commentary that the work engages in by virtue of subtle and
not so subtle symbolism, as well as juxtapositions and resonant language.
Encountering his old love at a poetry event where he fulfills the role of
servant, he is inspired to recite some poetry of his own, “Who are the
fortunate ones who gain the love they seek. When I asked for flowers, I was
given thorns” (italics mine). Not by chance, the love he cannot recognize is
Gulab, whose name means rose. And as for Meena, whose name means precious
stone, two slight juxtapositions fix her place in the equation. A prostitute
friend of Gulab says to someone, “You can hardly keep yourself, how can you
feed me, too?” Meena soon echoes this sentiment as she explains to Vijay, “How
could you bear my burden when you couldn’t feed yourself?” More forcefully,
Meena’s husband says to her, “Wonderful. My wife’s no better than a
streetwalker!” In the following scene, Vijay covers for Gulab by stating that
she is his wife, completing the symbolic inversion.
The film, in fact, treats prostitution in a wider sense, where the
materialistic populace has accepted its commoditization at the cost of its
humanity. In her sole interaction with Meena, she is asked how she knows
Vijay, to which she responds, “By good fortune.” When asked how could such a
gentleman know someone of her background, she responds, “Good fortune.”
Guru Dutt pioneered the use of lenses of much longer focal length than the
customary 50mm used in Bollywood at the time. This allowed him uncustomary
extreme close-ups, thereby eliciting greater expressiveness from his actors
without exaggerated theatrics. Dutt is purported to have said that 80 percent
of acting is in the eyes, and 20 percent in the rest of the body. He is also
regarded as the first to integrate song numbers within the narrative, keeping
them all of a piece with the rest of the scenes. The songs would arise
naturally out of a scene, as well as advance the narrative. Pyaasa is quite
unconventional as a musical, as the song numbers coexist in the same realistic
fabric as the rest of the numbers—with the arguable exception of two
numbers—so non-musical lovers should not need not cringe from giving it a go.
Both the musical scenes and the non-musical scenes share in common a certain
rhythm where natural movement and realistically motivated movements are
accented by the score, composed by S.D. Burman. The soundtrack utilizes
thematic coloring, such that certain characters have their own theme songs
that arise as fills and accents. Also, music is used to provide sound cues
referencing various sound cues.
A wonderful example is a scene where Gulab realizes who she just turned away
with the threat of removing her sandal and tries to convey this to her friend.
The rhythm, the use of Gulab’s theme, the genre-referencing musical motifs,
and the lighting are sumptuous. Perhaps the most impressive song number is
Aaja Sajan Mohe Ang Laga Le, where Gulab is turned away with her head bent,
and a woman’s voice arises which initially seems to be hers, but it turns out
to be that of a street singer whose song of the love of Krishna and Radha that
also stands in for Gulab and Vijay. It’s an extraordinary scene depicting a
simple event of Gulab indecisively observing Vijay who isn’t aware of her
presence, yet the stellar montage, and the rhythmic fluttering of their
clothes create pure brilliance.
Dutt’s collaboration with cinematographer V.K. Murthy, along with superb set
design, provide a feast of expressionistic, low key lighting that rises to the
aid of lyrical expressiveness. It’s all truly wonderful cinematic spectacle
with fluid camera movements, creative mise-en-scene, and careful editing. Last
but not least, the lyrics of poet Sahir Ludianvi, often based on his own
poetry, adds a real resonance to the film.
out of
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Posters
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Theatrical Release: 1957
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
DVD Comparison:
Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC
Big thanks to Fred Patton for all the Screen Caps!
(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - LEFT vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - RIGHT)
| DVD Box Covers |
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| Distribution |
Yash Raj Films Region 0 - NTSC |
Eros
International Region 0 - NTSC |
| Runtime | 2:18:01 | 2:18:05 |
| Video |
4:3
Original Aspect Ratio |
4:3
Original Aspect Ratio |
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NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
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Bitrate:
Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics)
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Bitrate:
Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection)
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| Audio | AC-3 6ch Hindi |
AC-3 3ch Hindi |
| Subtitles | English, None | English, None |
| Features |
Release Information: Studio: Yash Raj Films Aspect Ratio: Edition Details:
Documentary : "In Search of Guru Dutt" (84 minutes) Chapters 36 |
Release Information: Studio: Eros International Aspect Ratio:
Edition Details:
DVD
Release Date: 2000 Chapters 24 |
| Comments | The Eros DVD is at times significantly darker to the point of occluding detail. The lack of subtitled songs on the Eros part, especially given their essential role in advancing the narrative, is a grievous omission. Furthermore, the Eros subtitles reveal more grammatical mishaps. To drive the last nail in the coffin in favor of the Yash Raj release, the Eros disc is devoid of extras; meanwhile, the Yash Raj disc provides the very fine documentary, “In Search of Guru Dutt” by Nasreen Munni Kabir, which runs 84 minutes. Yash Raj wins hands down. |

DVD Menus
(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region
0 - NTSC - LEFT vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region
0 - NTSC - RIGHT)
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Subtitle sample
(Yash
Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP vs. Eros
International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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Screen Captures
(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Yash Raj Films (Forever Classics) - Region 0 - NTSC - TOP vs. Eros International (Guru Dutt Collection) - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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Report Card:
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Image: |
Yash Raj Films |
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Sound: |
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| Extras: | Yash Raj Films |
| Menu: | Yash Raj Films |
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Gary Tooze
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Many Thanks...