Ek Doctor Ki Maut
Ek Doctor Ki Maut | |
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File:Ek Doctor Ki Maut, 1990 film.jpg | |
Directed by | Tapan Sinha |
Written by | Ramapada Chowdhury (story, Abhimanyu) Tapan Sinha (screenplay) |
Produced by | National Film Development Corporation of India |
Starring | Pankaj Kapur Shabana Azmi Anil Chatterjee Irrfan Khan Deepa Sahi |
Cinematography | Soumendu Roy |
Edited by | Subodh Roy |
Music by | Vanraj Bhatia |
Release date |
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Running time | 122 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Ek Doctor Ki Maut (Template:Lang-en) is a 1990 award-winning film by noted Bengali director Tapan Sinha, which depicts the ostracism, bureaucratic negligence, reprimand and insult of a doctor and his research, instead of recognition. The film is based on the story "Abhimanyu" by Ramapada Chowdhury. This movie is loosely based on the life of Dr. Subhash Mukhopadhyay, an Indian Physician who pioneered the In vitro fertilisation treatment just around the same time when another leading scientist Dr. Robert Edwards was conducting separate experiments in England.
Plot
After years of painstaking research at the cost of his personal life, Dr. Dipankar Roy (Pankaj Kapur) discovers a vaccine for Leprosy. The news is flashed over television and overnight, an insignificant junior doctor receives international recognition. Professional jealousy and abuse of power threaten Dr. Roy, even as the Secretary of Health reprimands him for breaking the news to the press. He is asked to report to the Director of Health. Professional colleagues Dr. Arijit Sen and Dr. Ramananda invite him to a lecture but, it is merely a pretence to humiliate him. Dr. Roy suffers a mild heart attack, but he refuses to go to the hospital. His wife (Shabana Azmi) and a few others like Dr. Kundu (Anil Chatterjee) and Amulya (Irfan Khan) stand by Dr. Roy, but the harassment continues; a letter from a British foundation, John Anderson Foundation, is suppressed and Dr. Roy is transferred to a remote village. The last straw is two American doctors receiving credit for discovering the same vaccine. Dr. Roy is shattered. However, at the end, Dr. Roy gets an invitation from John Anderson Foundation inviting him to be a part of an eminent group of scientists working on other diseases. Dipankar Roy realizes that his research was fruitful. He also decides to accept the invitation as he just wants to work for the betterment of mankind.
Cast
- Pankaj Kapur as Dr. Dipankar Roy
- Shabana Azmi as Seema
- Anil Chatterjee as Dr. Kundu
- Irfan Khan as Amulya
- Deepa Sahi
- Vijayendra Ghatge as Dr. Arijit
- Sushant Sanyal
Reception
The film was greatly applauded among film critics and writers. Tapan Sinha, the director, was inspired by the life and death of Subhash Mukhopadhyay and dedicates this film to him.
Awards
- 1990 National Film Award for Second Best Feature Film
- 1990 National Film Award for Best Direction: Tapan Sinha
- 1990 National Film Award - Special Jury Award: Pankaj Kapoor (Dr. Dipankar Roy).
Bengal Film Journalists' Association Awards
- 1991 Best Film
- 1991 Best Director
Filmfare Awards
- 1992 Filmfare Best Screenplay Award: Tapan Sinha.
External links
- Articles sourced by IMDb from June 2019
- 1990 films
- 1990s Hindi-language films
- Films directed by Tapan Sinha
- Indian films
- Films whose director won the Best Director National Film Award
- Indian biographical films
- Films scored by Vanraj Bhatia
- Second Best Feature Film National Film Award winners
- National Film Development Corporation of India films