Je Janlagulor Akash Chhilo review: Nostalgic echoes of lost youth and ideological rifts

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Cast: Buddhadev Das , Pratik Dutta, Krishnendu Saha, and Turna Das
Director:
Saurav Palodhi
Duration:
2hr 45min
Language:
Bengali

Rating: 3.5


Adapted from stories by the late Rahul Arunoday Banerjee, Thakurpukur-based Ichheymoto ’s
charts the lives of four Xennial friends – Buban (Buddhadev Das), Tubai (Pratik Dutta), Tatin (Krishnendu Saha), and Soma (Turna Das). In Bijoygarh colony, they navigate life’s highs and lows as one, steeped in late ’90s romance: Shah Rukh Khan ballads, dreamy slow-motion, the hum of adda under neighborhood lights.
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Narrator Buban draws us in, profiling families and forging trials that sculpt their ideologies. Against Kolkata’s morphing political terrain – from Leftist legacies to Right-wing stirrings – the story vaults across decades, tracing mindset shifts that echo strained family ties. Flashpoints abound: East vs West Bengal identities, Left vs Right divides. These polarize the quartet, but the play pivots to intimate grief – the dissolution of their shared world, regret trailing like evening shadows.
Energetic and poignant, the show embraces nostalgia without sentimentality. Minimal sets – chairs, projections – let spotlights dance, spotlighting monologues on home turfs, endured abuse, societal slots. Brain drain, developmental droughts thread through, fueling longing for a memory-bound past, tinted rosy yet laced with melancholic tunes. Jamaican Farewell aches with forward marches; Apu–Durga echoes twist journeys into poignant inevitability.
A leisurely rhythm sustains it, blending tears with laughs. Bimal Chakraborty and Aditya Nandy ignite the Bangal father-in-law/Ghoti son-in-law spark with precise warmth. Wridhhyan Dasgupta’s young Tubai, Buban, and Tatin radiate naturalism; Meghatri Mondal’s innocent young Soma refreshes the stage – director Saurav Palodhi’s child mastery evident (
). Turna Das layers Soma richly, edged by Pratik Dutta’s fierce Tubai (inheriting Banerjee’s role) and Krishnendu Saha’s rupturing Tatin, who claims existence by fleeing bhodrolok abuse society ignores.
Buban endures: Buddhadev Das molds him as Shakespearean Fool – observer, player, decoder – with Kabhi Haan Kabhi Naa’s young SRK flair. His actor dreams bloom, but the role’s range peaks in a wrenching finale, jarring viewers. It probes choices personal and political: Did Bengal’s forward leaps recoil us backward, beyond salvage?– Poorna Banerjee