Antarjali Jatra, also known as Antarjali Yatra, is a 1987 film directed by Kolkata-based Indian film director Goutam Ghose based on a novel, Mahayatra, by Kamal Kumar Majumdar. It documents the institution of Kulin Brahmin polygamy in nineteenth-century Bengal. The film opens with Seetaram, a rich Kulin Brahmin, being brought to the bank of the Ganga for a virtuous death in contact with the holy river's waters, as suggested by his family priest. He did not die, even after waiting for a few days. An astrologer suggested that he would not die without a companion, i.e., a wife. An old Brahmin takes this opportunity to get rid of the burden of his young daughter Yashobati, without dowry, knowing that Seetaram is on his deathbed. Baiju, a kind-hearted chandala tried to reason with Yashobati, a newlywed, to run away. He narrates his inability to be a part of sin by making a funeral pyre for the newlywed and burning a young widow. He tried to reason with her that glory in sati is hollow. The film won the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Bengali in 1988. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section of the 1988 Cannes Film Festival.

Antarjali Jatra (1987)
Directed by Goutam Ghose
Description by Wikipedia
Movie Info
Tags
1988 Cannes Film Festival, Bengal, Best Feature Film, Certain Regard, Kolkata, Kulin Brahmin, Mahayatra, National Film Award, Un
Alternate Titles
Antarjali Jatra
IN, JP
Antarjali Yatra
IN
Rejsen over floden
DK
Resan bortom
SE
The Voyage Beyond
, US
अंतरजाली यात्रा
IN