Uday Shankar

Kalpana

Kalpana

The only film by the visionary dancer and choreographer Uday Shankar is a utopian dream of cultural renewal and a celebration of Indian dance in all its variety. Unfolding as an epic film within a film, Kalpana tells the story of a dancer (the director himself) who is determined to open a cultural center and breathe new life into India’s traditional artistic forms. Meanwhile, the visible adoration between him and his lead dancer arouses the jealousy of his enterprising companion. A riot of ecstatic imagery—including swirling surrealist dance spectacles—is interwoven with anticolonial, anticapitalist commentary, making for a radical, proto-Bollywood work that is one of the most influential films in Indian cinema.

Film Info

  • India
  • 1948
  • 152 minutes
  • Black & White
  • 1.37:1
  • Hindi
  • Spine #1148

Available In

Collector's Set

Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project No. 4

Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project No. 4

Blu-ray/DVD Combo Box Set

9 Discs

$99.96

Kalpana
Cast
Uday Shankar
Udayan, film director
Amala Uday Shankar
Uma
Lakshmi Kanta
Kamini
Dr. Glv. Subbarao
Drawing master
Birendra Banerjee
Noor
Swaraj Mitter Gupta
Ramesh
Anil Kumar Chopra
Madan, schoolteacher
Brijo Behari Banerjee
Uma’s father
Chiranjilal Shah
Gope
Devilal Samar
Sundar
K. Mukerjee
Grandfather
Dulal Sen
Mama
G.V. Karandikar
Producer
Ganesh Bannerjee
Theater manager
Farman Ali
Young Udayan
Begam Zamarudh
Young Uma
Credits
Director
Uday Shankar
Producer
Uday Shankar
Writer
Uday Shankar
Dialogue
Amrital Nagar
Lyrics
Sumitranandan Pant
Cinematography
K. Ramnoth
Music director
Vishnudas Shirali
Choreography
Uday Shankar
Choreography assistants
Amala Uday Shankar
Choreography assistants
Anil Kumar Chopra
Choreography assistants
Ganesh Joshi
Costumes
Amala Uday Shankar
Makeup
N. Sahadeva Rao
Editing
N. K. Gopal
Sound
C. E. Biggs
Art direction
A. K. Sekar
Special effects
G. Gnanayutham

Current

Kalpana: Dreaming the Impossible Dream

Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project No. 4

Kalpana: Dreaming the Impossible Dream

Uday Shankar’s fantastical dance epic embodies a progressive, postcolonial Indian aesthetic that is decades ahead of its time.

By Shai Heredia