As Bengalis however, this past year has been remarkable in another arena. Interestingly, we speak a lot less about it even in the daily press perhaps because it is less spectacular, more quiet. Yet it portends something novel for Bengal, where things otherwise seem to be the same old, same old in most other arenas of life. I have in mind a handful of Bengali films that we were fortunate to see in 2013. They portend something new and at the same time recall a bygone era of Bengali cinema. Think of the flourishing of Bengali films between the years 1970- 1972. We had Aranyer Dinratri (Days and Nights in the Forest), Pratidwandi (the Adversary), Seemabaddha (Company Limited), Sagina Mahato, Interview, Calcutta 71. Even 40 years later it is impossible not to be blown away by this impressive list that is by no means complete for I have not mentioned Chadmabeshi, Nishipadma, Har Mana Mar, Ekhane Pinjar and so many others featuring Uttam Kumar, Suchitra Sen, Madhabi Mukherjee, Supriya Debi, and others. Suchitra Sen, I learned yesterday, is critically ill. We lost Rituparno Ghosh, another trailblazer of Bengali cinema in 2013. As I remember these greats and pay my tribute to them at this moment of the year ending, let me also take a few moments to think of some remarkable achievements in Bengali cinema during this past year. 2013 has been a year of a different Bengali cinema. I say different instead of new because newness implies a break with the past. This year’s films, whether it was Taasher Desh (The Land of cards) by Q or Chader Pahaar (the Mountain of the Moon) have brought the past back, albeit in new garbs.