The Cloud Door

The Cloud Door (Hindi: बादल द्वार, German: Die Himmelspforte) is a 1994 short Indo-German drama film, directed by acclaimed Indian director Mani Kaul and featuring Hindu erotic literary themes.[1] The film was produced by the German producer Regina Ziegler. The Cloud Door was featured along with other short films such as Susan Seidelman's The Dutch Master and Ken Russell's The Insatiable Mrs. Kirsch, as a part of Ziegler Films' compilation of short erotic films called Erotic Tales.[2]

The Cloud Door
Title card
Directed byMani Kaul
Produced byRegina Ziegler
Lalitha Krishna
Written byMani Kaul (screenplay)
Bhāsa (play Avimaraka)
Mohammed Jayasi (poem Padmavat)
StarringAnu Agarwal
Murad Ali
Music byUstad Zia Fariddudin Dagar
CinematographyAnil Mehta
Edited byLalitha Krishna
Release date
Running time
29 minutes
CountryGermany
India
LanguageHindi

Mani Kaul drew upon three literary sources for it: the Sanskrit play Avimaraka, written by Bhāsa around 5th-7th century; the Sufi epic love poem Padmavat, written by Mohammed Jayasi in the 13th century; and the erotic Indian tales Suksapiti.[3]

Plot

An Indian king overhears a parrot telling erotic stories to his daughter. Enraged, he wishes to kill the parrot. The princess intervenes and saves the parrot's life by explaining to her father that the bird does not know what it is saying. In gratitude, the bird flies to the princess's lover and leads him through a labyrinth to the princess's private chambers. The princess and the lover spend the night making love.[3]

Reception

In January 1995, The Cloud Door was screened once for the public at the International Film Festival of India in Mumbai as part of the Erotic Tales program. Kaul, known for his aesthetic work, had never previously made an Indian erotic film, despite the country's rich history of erotic folk art and literature. The single-screening of the film caused an uproar due to its erotic nature and on-screen nudity, and resulted in the police being called in to prevent rioting.[3] An extra screening, exclusively for the press, was held later at a different venue.[3] The film was also screened at the Munich Film Festival, Locarno International Film Festival, New York Film Festival and the Robert Flaherty Film Seminar.[4]

Variety reviewer Todd McCarty said the film "features pictorial beauty, slow-building sensuality and surprising humor that combine to rich effect".[5] The reviewer for the New York Times said that the film, when viewed with subtitles and deprived of its cultural context of Muslim and Hindu literature, "becomes a succession of brightly colored images that almost tell a story: a beautiful woman, perhaps a courtesan; a green, long-tailed parrot who repeats the erotic phrases he's picked up in her room; potential lovers; a fish that laughs".[1] Another review observed that The Cloud Door has plenty of humorous and sensual imagery and flows like a folk tale.[6]Beautiful nothingness perhaps, but still nothingness. Certainly, the actors here are very attractive, the costumes and sets are gorgeous, but the story has very few memorable moments to make this film memorable.

gollark: I just adjusted it until it stopped crashing or recursing infinitely.
gollark: Me.
gollark: Does it depend on whether you already defined x?
gollark: Unused RAM is wasted RAM, LyricLy.
gollark: No, V is good, actually, so it can't be bad.

References

  1. James, Caryn (28 September 1994). "Movie Review - Whispering Pages - Film Festival Review; Far From Commercial and Quirky to the Hilt". movies.nytimes.com. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
  2. "Erotic Tales Vol. 1". Amazon.com. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
  3. "The Cloud Door". Ziegler Films. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  4. "Films screened at The Robert Flaherty Film Seminar". www.flahertyseminar.org. Retrieved 7 March 2009.
  5. McCarthy, Todd (31 August 1994). "The Cloud Door Review - Read Variety's Analysis Of The Movie The Cloud Door". www.variety.com. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
  6. "The Cloud Door". Goethe-Institut Australien. Archived from the original on 5 April 2008. Retrieved 5 March 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.