|  Cast:Manoj Bajpai, Delzad Hiwale, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Barry John, Dibyendu Bhattacharya
 Director: Bedabrata Pain
 
 A little-known but hugely significant chapter of the Indian freedom struggle constitutes the narrative kernel of Chittagong, scientist-turned-filmmaker Bedabrata Pain's directorial debut. As far as period sagas go, this is anything but average fare.
 
 This   simple, sure-handed and easy-flowing film strikes no false notes, nor   does it fall prey to any creative ambiguity. The director knows exactly   what he wants to mine from the pages of history and he extracts just the   right degree of dramatic energy from the tale of intense conflict that   lies at the heart of the film.
 
 Pain's approach to the rousing   saga of a band of gutsy men and boys who had the British rulers on the   run, if only briefly, in Chittagong in the early 1930s – the selfsame   story that Ashutosh Gowariker brought to the screen in Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey far less effectively – is refreshingly realistic and clear-headed.
 
 Chittagong is inspired by the work and political philosophy of school teacher and   freedom fighter Surya Sen (Manoj Bajpayee), who was sent to the gallows   in 1934 for his role in the Chittagong armoury raid and other attacks on   British interests.
 
 The momentous events leading to the armoury   attack on April 18, 1930, and culminating in the Tebhaga peasant   uprising in the mid 1940s are seen through the eyes of a young rebel,   Jhunku (Delzad Hiwale), who emerged on the post-Independence political   stage as Communist Party ideologue and central committee member Subodh   Roy.
 
 He was a well-connected barrister's son but turned his back   on the comfortable life that a UK law degree would have guaranteed and   joined the militant revolutionaries in their armed struggle against the   British rulers.
 
 As portrayed in the film, the 14-year-old boy is   constantly assailed by self doubt as the rebels prepare to mount an   unprecedented attack on the British garrison in Chittagong and wrest the   town from the colonisers.
 
 The district magistrate, Wilkinson   (Barry John) is fond of Jhunku and repeatedly dangles the carrot of a   foreign education before him.
 
 Jhunku goes through a gamut of   emotions after he plunges into the freedom struggle. He and tens of   other schoolboys are trained for battle by Masterda, as Surya Sen is   called by his followers, and his principal lieutenants – Nirmal Sen   (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), Ambika Chakrabarti (Dibyendu Bhattacharya),   Ananta Singh (Jaideep Ahlawat), Lokenath Bal (Raj Kumar Yadav) and   Ganesh Ghosh (Vishal Vijay).
 
 Pain, who has co-written the film   with Shonali Bose, invests Chittagong with a soft, lyrical air,   reinforced by the lilt of a soulful theme song rendered by Shankar   Mahadevan.
 The genteel treatment of the hard-edged material   accentuates not just the explosive nature of the film's action but also   the sheer magnitude of the courage demonstrated by its motley group of   teenage protagonists.
 
 The director does not resort to overt   melodrama or visceral vigour to drive home the point. He instead banks   upon the consistent authenticity of the emotions in order to achieve   stirring results.
 
 Chittagong is, on one level, a heartfelt tribute to the indomitable spirit of Masterda's   boys and girls – the latter group is represented principally by   Pritilata Waddedar (Vega Tamotia), the Indian freedom struggle's first   female martyr of the 20th century.
 
 The stoic Pritilata, for whom   Nirmal Sen has a soft spot, provides the film a sub-plot of unrequited   love as well as a theme that hinges on the question of gender in the   composition of Surya Sen's poorly armed but determined battalion of   rebels.
 Equally importantly, the film also illustrates what people's   power can achieve if the will to attempt the seemingly impossible is   strong enough and the leadership to harness its potential has the   requisite tenacity and vision. The resonance that home truth has for our   troubled times cannot be overstated.
 
 Chittagong certainly   isn't a drab and dreary history lesson. It manages to be a gripping   human drama without being either a sweeping Hollywood-style adventure or   a Bollywood-inflected patriotic saga cranked up to a defeaning pitch   for easy consumption.
 Thanks to its restrained tenor, the sustained subtlety of its storytelling devices and its elegiac undertone, Chittagong should rank among the more distinctive feature films made on India's war of independence.
 
 What makes Chittagong particularly special is the way it depicts heroism not as   muscle-flexing, chest-thumping, rhetoric-driven bravado (as in standard   'war' films) but simply as audacious acts of defiance by ordinary people   in the face of grave risk and the prospect of inevitable failure.
 
 The   power of the tale is enhanced significantly by the acting. Manoj   Bajpayee is top-notch as Surya Sen, and so is Nawazuddin Siddiqui in the   role of Nirmal Sen.
 Delzad Hiwale captures the doubts, fears, guilt   and anger of the teenage protagonist with an endearing, wide-eyed   freshness. Vega Tamotia makes a deep impression.
 
 Among the key   members of the supporting cast, Dibyendu Bhattacharya, Jaideep Ahlawat,   Raj Kumar Yadav and Barry John make every minute they have on the screen   count.
 An absolute must watch.
 
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