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The Bengal Files Review: Telling It Like It Is

The Bengal Files stars Mithun Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi, Darshan Kumar, Simrat Kaur, Anupam Kher, Saswata Chatterjee, Namashi Chakraborty, Rajesh Khera, Puneet Issar, Priyanshu Chatterjee, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Sourav Das and Mohan Kapur.

Movie name:The Bengal Files
Director:Vivek Agnihotri
Movie Casts:Mithun Chakraborty, Pallavi Joshi, Darshan Kumar, Simrat Kaur, Anupam Kher, Saswata Chatterjee, Namashi Chakraborty, Rajesh Khera, Puneet Issar, Priyanshu Chatterjee, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Sourav Das, Mohan Kapur

Review by Subhas K Jha: First things first. Vivek Agnihotri’s The Bengal Files is a powerful cinematic work. Not Hindu, not Muslim, it is just high-powered cinema with moments that are aglow with cinematic energy. This is not an  easy film to watch. Like life, it is brutal and unsparing,  drawing  much-needed attention to what is clearly  an ignored  but essential  episode of   Indian history,  the one that the  history books forgot to mention , maybe because children  in our country are spoonfed the Disney version of  harsh reality. We don’t want them  to grow up with the wrong  values, do we?

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Agnihotri’s film is hard to  look away from even  as  its  relentless brutality—at times  bordering on tortuousness — begins to register as the quintessential core of our  existence. For centuries  we have been fed  an over-sweetened version of histories mysteries.

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Vivek Agnihotri  snatches  the comforter  from our mouths, and tells it like it is.

There is no doubt about the historical  accuracy of the  communal carnage (in reverse) in Bengal when Direct Action Day on 16 August 1946  became the occasion for the most massive genocide of Hindus…and why should we shy away from looking at the Hindus as victims of  communal carnage?

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The film moves in unexpected waves, creating arresting ripples across time. The narrative moves in two time zones: one before the great  divide know as the Partition and  the  other  in contemporary times. The only link between them is one genocide survivor.

What Agnihotri tells us with persuasive authority is that nothing has changed as far as politicians and their games of communal divide are concerned.

Someone says at one point, “A bunch of men around a table decided  to divide India into two. Nobody asked the people  of India if they wanted the Partition.”

 The writing is sharp rigorous and constantly probing the wounds of history. Are the lead players and the game  changers of our country’s flight from the bloody Partition to contemporary times, really deserving of their place as  architects of modern India?

This questions keeps popping up  all through the remarkably constructed  film, so well shot by cinematographer Attar Singh Saini, every frame feels vital, implosive. Vivek Agnihotri’s  cinematic acumen has amplified manifold since he last directed the tepid Vaccine War.

 The Bengal Files is vibrant and combustive, although some of the more dramatic interludes tend  to overstay their welcome. But some of  the performances carry the narrative to its triumphant finish. The  underrated Darshan Kumar, an Agnihotri regular, is brilliant as a young Kashmiri  Pandit cop grappling with  his ghosts from the past and ghouls in the present. His monologue about the communal identity  of Independent India is  a revelation.

Pallavi Joshi and Simrat Kaur play the young and old versions of  the same character , though  their  connectivity is not visually convincing. Pallavi Joshi brings a tragic ethos to her part, as a woman who has chosen to forget her traumatic past.

Eklavya Sood is charming as  a young intrepid Sikh from the past who believes tears should be wiped  by the one who weeps, not others. Rajesh Khera has a lucid monologue on why Muslims are different from  Hindus. It had old Gandhi (Anupam Kher) stumped as much as we. Gandhi, by the way, advises  girls  to avoid communal violence by  committing suicide. No comment  needed.

Saswata Chatterjee  as a communal politician is terrific especially in a deftly written sequence where we see him assume the role of a gracious householder. The progression and momentum of that sequence from  cultured  to  malevolent  shows the workings of  brilliant mind.

Do not underestimate Vivek Agnihotri. Don’t dismiss him  as a propagandist. He is an expert storyteller  who knows exactly where to punctuate and where to let go. I was fairly surprised by how well the untold story from a shameful slice of our history is told here. You may not agree with what The Bengal  Files has  to say.  Or rather what Bengal Files has to say may not agree with  you. But you can’t  afford to turn away from what this film has to say.

First published on: Sep 06, 2025 12:22 AM IST


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