Mumbai:Filmmaker Basu Chatterjee's films are relevant even today as they were simple stories told in an assuming manner, says actor Amol Palekar, the star of many of the director's middle-of-the-road brand of cinema.
Chatterjee's films are quoted by filmmakers for challenging the theatrics of commercial cinema while being more accessible than parallel films of the era, but Palekar believes the veteran filmmaker was never given due credit by the industry or media.
Chatterjee, one of the pioneers of this gentler style of cinema in the country, breathed his last at his home here on Thursday. He was 93.
In an interview with PTI, Palekar, whose partnership with the filmmaker stretched through eight films, remembered Chatterjee's unmistakable simplicity and contribution to the common man's cinema.
The duo first worked on Rajnigandha in 1974, followed by a string of successes in the form of Chhoti Si Baat, Chitchor and Baton Baton Mein, which cemented Palekar's position as the everyday man's hero.
"He kept on making parallel films, without making any commercial compromises and yet made very successful films. He, being one of the pioneers in that, I feel the industry and the media never acknowledged this fact, this contribution of Basu da. I feel really sorry, that what was due to him, was never ever given to him," the veteran actor said.
Palekar said it's important to look at the films Chatterjee made with a historical lens.
READ | RIP Basu Chatterjee: The filmmaker who redefined Bollywood hero on celluloid
The rise of Chatterjee's brand of cinema in the 1970s was parallel to the larger-than-life action dramas of the times. Yet, amid all the blockbuster noise, Chatterjee chose to chronicle quieter stories of life's ordinariness.
"At that time, on one hand there was this mainstream cinema, where everything was and still is larger-than-life. Where you needed and still do, a dramatic story, fast-paced twist-laden narratives, Basu da's films were devoid of any of this.
"His films had simple stories told in an unassuming manner. Yet, they were so interesting, you simply loved them. His films are still relevant because he talked about common men, ordinary people."
Chatterjee could tell simple stories with much conviction perhaps because he never took himself or his success seriously, said the 75-year-old actor.