In contrast, the monsoon sequence in Do Bigha Zamin is without sensÂual appeal. Bimal Roy is so distant from the moment that instead of dwelling on the physicality of the rain, he distracts us with an elaborate song and danÂce sequence. The purpose is to illustrate an entire condition바카라”the plight of the farmers who must depend on the vagaries of the elements for their sustenaÂnce, the fragility of their joys and hopes. The argument being made here is not that Bimal Roy fails where Satyajit Ray succeeds, but that the two aim at contrary things. In Ray바카라™s film, the monsoon sequence illuminates a moment when we reflect upon the individual fates that await its protagonists. Change is the essence of Pather Panchali바카라™s discourse, while the sequence in Do Bigha Zamin reflects upon an entire condition. Roy was trying to bridge the gap betÂween popular cinema and 바카라˜art바카라™ film, and used sonÂgs and dances. But one finds the same perceptions prevailing in 바카라˜art바카라™ films as well, i.e. cinema outside the works of Satyajit Ray. Art cinema does not deal with Puranic sentiments, but it still deals with pre-existent truths바카라”derived from social texts. An illustration would be Marxist filmmaker Mrinal Sen바카라™s portrayal of the working-Âclass family during the monsoons in Calcutta 바카라™71 (1971), rain intruding into the living quarters through the roof and a wet dog sharing the family바카라™s gloom. Rain does not pertÂain to a moment here, but to a permanÂent condition seen as typical of the poor under capitalism. Shaji N. Karun바카라™s celebrated film Piravi (1989) is about an old man waiting for his young son to return when the boy has been killed in police custody for political reasons. Shaji uses the rain here to set a conÂstant mood of despondency, but that despondency pertains to the old man바카라™s condition. His son never returns and his condition does not transform. The use of the incessant rain can also be seen here as symbolic of an entire disconsolate condition and it sets a mood commÂensurate with that aim.