In Agantuk, Ray literally plants his own voice to articulate human concerns in a rapidly changing world order. Through the protagonist Manmohan Mitra, surely Ray’s alter ego, he questions the primacy of art and the artist, what the terms mean in the context of the world, what is civilisation, and indeed who defines what is civilised and what is not. Before passing on the baton to a new generation of film-makers and viewers, Ray uses his beloved medium to leave behind his message as a citizen of the world, decrying narrow confines of passport- and prejudice-induced boundaries, and extolling the new generation, represented by his young grandnephew, to refrain from being a kupamanduk, a frog in the well. Surely, this can also be seen as a call to the next generation of film-makers to look beyond the obsession with the market so as to create art that outlives the creator. Reminding them that extraordinary films are made not by extraordinary technology or budget, but by extraordinary imagination, intuitiveness and insight.