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Ankur (1974)

Ankur (1974)
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When a married man seduces his serving girl, it's just for fun. As a spoiled and raw young man of India's upper classes, he is unprepared to face reality when the girl shows up pregnant, and he virtually has a breakdown. The girl, however, is made of tougher stuff, as is her husband; he has long wanted children, and accepts the child as his own. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Director(s):
Shyam Benegal
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Ankur

When a married man seduces his serving girl, it's just for fun. As a spoiled and raw young man of India's upper classes, he is unprepared to face reality when the girl shows up pregnant, and he virtually has a breakdown. The girl, however, is made of tougher stuff, as is her husband; he has long wanted children, and accepts the child as his own. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

Complete Cast of Ankur


Director(s):
Shyam Benegal
Writer(s):
Shyam Benegal
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Thomas J.

This is probably one of the best movies I have ever seen. Many people see this movie as "class struggle", indeed the name which means seedling, is a theme in the movie in many ways, seedling that is a gift, seedling that is a baby, the seedling of revolt - the last is what people generally see. To me though, this movie is a highly skilled depiction of human nature.

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Keith G.

Very moving and powerful look at both the caste system and the treatment of women as objects in rural India, in the early 1950s. A young woman from the serf class is taken in and slowly seduced by her arrogant, handsome young "master" whose house she keeps. But when she becomes pregnant, and his promised child bride finally becomes old enough to join him in the house, our heroine is slowly, painfully pushed aside and locked out. The film is occasionally heavy handed in its politics, but the truth behind the story makes the slightly agit-prop nature forgivable. This has none of the singing, dancing and theatrics we have come to associate with modern Indian cinema. This harkens back to the stark, quiet realism of Satyajit Ray, with complex characters and surprising subtlety.

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