Uma
2018

Uma

In the film, a young girl, Uma (Sara Sengupta) living in Switzerland, is fighting for her life with a terminal disease. She wants to see Durga Puja of Kolkata—the biggest celebrated festival of the Bengali Hindus. Himadri Sen, her father (Jisshu Sengupta) takes her to Kolkata to fulfill her dream by planning to set up a fake Durga Puja. Her father and family struggle much to make his daughter's dreams come true and find a director called Brahmananda Chakraborty (Anjan Dutt). The failed director sees this as his opportunity to create a masterpiece, by helping a dying girl. After several requests, the director agrees and makes a false set of Durga Puja. During this, they face many problems to make Uma's dream true.

The plot is based on true events surrounding the life and death of Evan Leversage, who lived in St. George in Ontario, Canada. This involved creating an unseasonal Christmas to fulfil the child’s wish

Locations in Europe: Switzerland (unspecified locations)
Storyline
  • Director/Producer: Director: Srijit Mukherji, Production Company: Shree Venkatesh Films, Producers: Shrikant Mohta and Mahendra Soni
    Line Producer/Executive Producer/Associate Producer: Line Producers: Sudhanshu Kuma, Hind Nabulsi, Navmeet Singh, Andreas Payer (Austria), Associate Producer: Aashish Singh
    Star(s): Jisshu Sengupta, Anjan Dutt, Sara Sengupta
    Language: Bengali


    Film Location Analysis

    By Kaushik Bhaumik

    Unfortunately, the exact locations in Switzerland are unidentifiable. There are a few sequences at the beginning of the film showing:

    1. Uma with her father in a villa on the lakeside. There is a governess who looks after Uma in some of the sequences. There are a few flashback scenes set in the villa and around showing Uma’s parents fighting and breaking up.
    2. There is one short sequence in a children’s school where Uma expresses her fascination for Durga Puja back in India in a classroom. 
    3. There is a short sequence in a clinic where Uma’s father comes to know that she is suffering from a terminal disease.
    4. There are a couple of drone sequences showing Himadri driving his car along highways.
    5. There are miscellaneous sequences showing Uma and her governess on a lakefront, playing, blowing alpine horns, and inside a cable car in a snowy mountainscape.
    6. Finally, there is a dream sequence where Himadri is seen running down lanes of an abandoned town finally coming to confront the image of Durga in a square.

    There is a sequence inside the restroom (probably of a museum in which we see Uma briefly) which has a pop plaster sculpture rendition of the iconic photographic image of Albert Einstein sticking out his tongue (taken by Arthur Sasse after his 72nd birthday party at Princeton University in 1951). Interestingly enough, in 2020, Switzerland minted 999 copies of the world’s smallest gold coin (0.12 inch in diameter) with a nominal value of a quarter Swiss franc carrying the image of Einstein sticking his tongue out, on the obverse of the coin. One needed to use a special magnifying glass to actually see the image.

    Additional Information & Links

    Srijit Mukherji is known for shooting films in exotic locations. Yeti Obhijaan (2017), Mukherji’s film preceding Uma, also had parts shot in Switzerland. He shot Mishawr Rawhoshyo (2013), the first film of the Kakababu series, of which Yeti is the second instalment, in Egypt.

    Tourism

    There is no evidence for the film having had any impact on Indian tourism in Switzerland.

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