Tahar Namti Ranjana -2013- - By Rituparno Ghosh... ⟶ 【Updated】
★★★★☆ (4/5) For its raw courage, poetic depth, and Ghosh’s unforgettable performance.
Rituparno Ghosh’s direction is at its most self-reflexive and courageous. He employs long, languid takes, close-ups that feel almost invasive, and a muted color palette that mirrors the protagonist’s fading spirit. The narrative is non-linear, weaving between film shoots, courtrooms, and intimate conversations. Ghosh cleverly uses the film-within-a-film structure to blur the lines between reality and performance—suggesting that for a queer person in a conservative society, life itself is a forced performance. Tahar Namti Ranjana -2013- - By Rituparno Ghosh...
The film stars Rituparno Ghosh himself as a celebrated filmmaker (a clear alter ego) suffering from a creative and emotional block. He falls in love with a young, spirited man named Sananda (played with raw intensity by Jisshu Sengupta). However, to protect Sananda’s impending marriage into a conservative family, the filmmaker agrees to sign a bizarre contract: he will legally change his name to the feminine "Ranjana" and undergo a "de-gendering" process in the public eye, erasing his queer identity to salvage the boy’s reputation. ★★★★☆ (4/5) For its raw courage, poetic depth,
The film is also a tragic love story, but not a romanticized one. It shows that love under the shadow of shame is corrosive. The contract becomes a brilliant metaphor for the unspoken deals queer people make every day—sacrificing authenticity for acceptance. The narrative is non-linear, weaving between film shoots,
At its core, Tahar Namti Ranjana is a scathing critique of how society commodifies and then discards deviant identities. The title itself is ironic—"Ranjana" is a name chosen not by the self, but by society to appease its fragile morals. Ghosh asks a searing question: What is in a name? When that name is your entire identity, being forced to change it is a form of living death.