Monday, May 4, 2026

Kolkata "Mahanagar's" mandate against Mamata Banerjee --- Rise and Fall of a bathroom slipper-wearing woman from a lower middle class background

"Mahanagar" is a Satyajit Ray master piece. As the name suggests - 'Big City' --- the film portrays contradictions of a metro life and multiple challenges. 


In an age of development, the past/old and the "Tradition" struggle to survive amongst the superficial morals of the middleclass. 


As industry and trade take over the city, the morality which Hindu Bengalis upper caste families try to uphold onto quite tightly are crumbled and re-shaped as well. In political sense, that is a struggle that the then Calcutta and today's Kolkata is still undergoing.   



Vanishing magic of 2011 - Reality of 2026 


During Buddhadeb era; Mamata Banerjee symbolised a new kind of protest -- linking use of land for agriculture and not industries. This had touched an emotive chord. 


The film is a story of a housewife. But Mamata has been a lifelong spinster and the struggles of the outgoing chief minister and the film's protagonist Arati are similar.   








On the vote counting day, May 4th -- the BJP has turned the table.

From 14 in 2021 to 54 seats in Bengal's Presidency region, the Lotus party has flipped the script in Kolkata and surrounding areas and extended its reach beyond the tea garden districts.


The film Mahanagar was made in the 1960s. The era was different. First the Congress and then the Left - Mamata struggled and came up the ladder hard way. She did not have spoon-feeding luxury or a political legacy to cherish. The film's character - a faceless housewife struggles --- she is dutiful, manages home ad accepts life as it came. 

But when the crisis comes as cost of living increases manifold; she shows courage and turns a rebel. 


The politician Mamata was always a rebel. She thrived with it. She was manhandled by Left goons and cops. She showed her rebellion nature even in Parliament. Protested against Speaker Lok Sabha, Shvraj Patil in 1995 and in 2004 threw bangles at the Speaker Somnath Chatterjee (Marxist) for disallowing her not to raise the issue of Bangladeshi infiltration. 


The paradox is in 2026; she opposed SIR and by then her image is pro-infiltrators too.    The Bangladeshi infiltration issue also contributed big time for her ouster.


In the film, Arati resigns from her job in a fit of rage.


In unemployment she and her husband 'become equal'. Is that the proper way of  resembling the growth of the metropolitan and the prosperity ? 


In politics; the context is different. There is enough 'rage' in Mamata but perhaps misdirected ones.  If Arati could not survive the job atmosphere; Mamata now has to bow out of office because people have expressed no confidence in her. 






Born: January 5, 1955, in Kolkata, Mamata began her political career in the 1970s and quickly rose within the Congress ranks.

She was Union Minister under P V Narasimha Rao and Atal Bihari Vajpayee. She had defeated Somnath Chatterjee in 1984 but lost the seat in 1989 to Manini Chatterjee of CPI-M.

She never contested from the same seat. In 2021, she lost Nandigram and this year she is giving a brilliant tight in Bhabaninagar. 

Of course, she is leading but she was trailing once.


In Kolkata region, the BJP was doing well in Bidhannagar and Rashbehari (where journalist Swapan Dasgupta is trying his luck).


Mamata will be always remembered for achieving the unthinkable - the ouster of the communists in 2011. 


What makes the  film revolutionary ? 

Arati’s husband (Anil Chatterjee) says in the film ‘a woman’s place is in the home‘, 


Mamata too was ridiculed and discouraged a lot by the Leftists but in the end; the human spirit mattered to both -- the politician as well as the character  in silver screen.



Rajiv Gandhi and Mamata 

  


For over 15 years, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's pitch and emotional appeal were built around the formula of three Ms - maa, maati, and manush. 

However, the 2026 high-stakes poll battle saw four Ms shaping the contest - Muslim, mahila (women), migrants and the Matua (Hindu) community.


The appeal of two more Ms - Modi and Mamata - were also crucial in determining the results of West Bengal elections.




Blogger in Kolkata 




Moreover, during campaign PM Narendra Modi said - TMC made lives of Ma - unsafe, Maati was made available for Bangladeshi Muslim infiltrators and Manush - local West Bengal citizens had to flee or move out of the state for job.



ends 


Assam ... It's BJP wave ::: Even Gaurav Gogoi struggling ::: Opposition heavyweights trail

 In Assam, it's BJP wave. The saffron party, which remained at No. 3 prior to 2016 --- is now in power since then and has scored hat-trick this year.  


Leader of the Opposition in the outgoing Assam Assembly, Debabrata Saikia, is trailing in the Nazira constituency as counting progresses. 

According to Election Commission data after the fourth round, BJP candidate Mayur Borgohain has secured 22,536 votes, while Saikia has polled 13,661 votes. 

Current margin: BJP ahead by 8,875 votes. 

Notably, Nazira has long been considered a stronghold of the Saikia family, represented earlier by former Chief Minister Hiteswar Saikia and Hemoprava Saikia. The current trend marks a significant shift as counting continues.


Counting is being held at 40 centres, with Nagaon hosting three, and Kokrajhar, Tinsukia and Jorhat two each. 

Security deployment includes 25 CAPF companies guarding strongrooms and counting venues, supported by 800 unarmed personnel for EVM movement, two additional CAPF units on static duty, 93 state armed police companies and 85 Assault Groups on standby.  


Blogger in Dibrugarh : Assam 



Opposition heavyweights trail across key seats in early trends  

Top opposition names Debabrata Saikia, Akhil Gogoi, Lurinjyoti Gogoi, Bhuyan fall behind as BJP gains across seats


Raijor Dal chief Akhil Gogoi



All major opposition leaders in Assam, including Leader of the Opposition aikia, Akhil Gogoi, Lurinjyoti Gogoi, Jagadish Bhuyan and Rajen Gohain, were trailing in their respective constituencies.

BJP's Mayur Borgohain secured 11,607 votes after the second round, compared to Saikia's 6,640. 

Raijor Dal president and MLA Akhil Gogoi, contesting to retain the Sibsagar seat, is trailing after the first round. He polled 3,262 votes against 5,171 votes secured by BJP's Kushal Dowari.  Assam Congress chief and Jorhat MP Gaurav Gogoi is trailing BJP candidate Hitendra Nath Goswami in the Jorhat Assembly constituency after the second round of counting, according to early trends. 


Amid the ongoing counting process, Gaurav Gogoi said the Congress has put in place monitoring mechanisms to ensure transparency and accountability in the handling of Electronic Voting Machines He was trailing by over 4000 votes. 


Gohpur --- 

 After completion of Round 8 counting in the Gohpur constituency, the BJP continues to maintain a commanding lead with 44,032 votes, while the Congress stands at 19,022 votes. 

Current lead: BJP ahead by 25,010 votes. 


Behali -- BJP has further extended its lead with 47,280 votes, while CPI(ML) stands at 15,275 votes. Current lead: BJP ahead by 32,005 votes. 


Sidli-Chirang BPF candidate Paniram Brahma continues to extend his lead as counting progresses. 

Paniram Brahma has secured 36,854 votes, leading by 7,858 votes. UPPL candidate Ranjit Kumar Basumatary has polled 28,996 votes. 

BPF continues to strengthen its lead with each round. After completion of the sixth round of counting in No. 53 Laharighat Assembly constituency, Congress candidate Dr. Asif Mohammad Nazar is leading with 43,705 votes. 

AIUDF candidate Siddiq Ahmed is in second place with 18,786 votes, followed by 

AGP candidate Mohammad Khalilur Rahman with 3,703 votes. Among others, Haresa Khanam (Independent) has secured 400 votes, Omar Farooq (Independent) 211 votes, while NOTA stands at 433 votes.





Sunday, May 3, 2026

Some Good must come of the BJP victory in West Bengal :::: Mamata Banerjee's career has been a story of stupendous success as much as this latest tragic tale of downfall :::: Bengal mandate - a display of Hindu resurgence, but guided by Nationalism

EC data shows - BJP leading in 159


Trinamool Congress - 83


Can banner, bickering and mayhem now become history in West Bengal ?

West Bengal mandate is certainly a display of Hindu resurgence. 

But it was guided by genuine nationalism !!









Answering to a query on 'BJP leading in Muslim dominated areas', BJP leader Suvendu Adhikari said :

"There has been a Muslim bifurcation. This bifurcation is particularly evident in Malda, Murshidabad, and North Dinajpur. In South Bengal and Cooch Behar, Muslims are still initially leaning more towards the TMC, but the kind of 90–95% consolidation seen in 2021 and 2024 is no longer there. 

There are visible cracks in that support base."







As counting underway in four states and one UT, BJP spokesperson 

Syed Zafar Islam says, “It will be a historic performance, whether in West Bengal, Kerala, or Puducherry. We are expecting a clean sweep in Bengal. You will see that there will be surprising results in favour of the NDA even in Tamil Nadu. 

This will be a historic performance because people want a government that works in the interest of the public and the state." 



Heads rolled as Monday, first day of a new working week and the fourth day of May 2026, unfolded. The BJP had campaigned, 'char Maee (Hindi for May), Didi gai". 


It's a reality today. 







The TMC led by its mercurial mass leader Mamata Banerjee has been rejected by substantial margins in their own bastions not invariably by seasoned politicians and also as much by certain odd characters. 

Suvendu Adhikari is no 'odd' protagonist. A creation of Nandigram movement of Mamata Banerjee and Suvendu's father Sishir Adhikari - the former lieutenant of the TMC supremo today gave a good fight to his  former boss in Bhabaninpur. 

In fact, he was leading for a while but lately Mamata took the lead. 


In 2021, he had humbled her in Nandigram. The BJP has achieved its singular objective of capturing power in West Bengal. In such heightened achievements; people may often say - 'dream come true'. 


But this would beat such an eulogy as well. It was more than a Dream. They have beaten a 'malady' in the TMC leadership. 







We may use the phrase Folie de grandeur (French for "madness of grandeur") and it refers to delusions of grandeur or even megalomania --- where an individual holds an exaggerated, unrealistic belief in their own power, wealth and intellect.


Between April 23 and May 4 - the 10-day duration the TMC was looking for excuses. The 'excuses' that would stall the leadership from the blame of defeat. The reality is much bitter. 


And the date with destiny cannot be postponed for ever.


In 2005, Lalu Prasad had faced such a situation in Bihar.    








Postal ballot momentum appears to have translated into a strong early lead for the BJP in West Bengal, with the party now ahead in 185 seats, comfortably past the halfway mark. 


The Trinamool Congress trails at 106, as counting continues across key states including Assam, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Puducherry. 

(around 1130 hours while counting was on) 

In Tamil Nadu, Vijay's Tamilaga Vettri Kazhagam (TVK) is now a force to be reckoned with, and is leading in 82 seats, while the DMK is leading closely behind with 57 seats, followed by 47 for the AIADMK. 



Blogger in Dibrugarh : Assam 




In Assam, the BJP has taken a massive lead, crossing the majority mark of 64 and leading in 83 seats, while the Congress is ahead in 27. In Kerala, the Congress-led UDF has widened the gap over the ruling LDF and is leading in 73 seats. The LDF and BJP are behind at 25 and 12 seats, respectively. 


In Puducherry, the NDA is leading in six seats and the DMK-Congress alliance is ahead in two seats and TVK one, say very early trends.




Blogger 



The apologists of the Sickular brigade must stop putting the blame for Mamata Banerjee's defeat on SIR or Election Commission's use of its powers. It was not due to Team Modi-Shah's communal platform as has been stated numerous times in the past. 



BBC snap 



The Bengal mandate is certainly a display of Hindu resurgence. But it was guided by genuine nationalism. It was a vote against Islamic radicalism. It was a vote - as BJP's Samik Bhattacharya says - an electoral battle to prevent the state of West Bengal turn into a new Bangladesh. 

The TMC did not realise the slogan 'Jai Bangla' has a typical communal agenda. It's a slogan borrowed from Awami League in Banglaesh and hence had to a pay a bigger price any other ruling party would have paid after 15 years in office.  




Namo: Led and coached the Team well 



ends 

DMK headquarters give 'deserted look' ::: Celebrations cancelled ::::: Trinamool set for major loss of face in West Bengal

 The BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) has crossed the majority mark in Assam, according to the latest Election Commission trends. As of 10.05 am alliance is leading in more than 90 seats in the 126-member Assembly, putting it on course to form the government as counting continues. 

In West Bengal, the BJP leading in 172.... far ahead of 148 mark and not far away from 200 mark in 294-member assembly.


No victory rallies will be allowed after announcement of results in Bengal: EC official 

Vijay is Tamil Nadu's 'Jana Nayagan', 

BJP flips Bengal's 'khela'















TVK pushes DMK behind with leads in 83 seats, AIADMK ahead in 54

New entrant TVK, led by actor-politician Vijay, was leading in as many as 83 constituencies on Monday when counting of votes polled in the April 23 Assembly polls was on across Tamil Nadu. The AIADMK was leading in 58 seats while the ruling DMK was ahead in 34, 

The Vijay-led Tamilaga Vetri Kazhagam has emerged as a major disruptor as counting of votes is underway in Tamil Nadu. As per very early trends, the TVK is leading in 101 seats while the incumbent DMK-led alliance is ahead in 50. The AIADMK-led alliance, meanwhile, is ahead in just 73 seats.


For over 15 years, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's pitch and emotional appeal were built around the formula of three 

Ms - maa, maati, and manush. 

However, the 2026 high-stakes poll battle is seeing five Ms shaping the contest - Muslim, mahila (women), migrants, Matua community, and the machinery deployed by the BJP. The appeal of two more Ms - Modi and Mamata - will also be crucial in determining the Bengal elections.

Moreover, during campaign PM Narendra Modi said - TMC made lives of Ma - unsafe, Maati was made available for Bangladeshi Muslim infiltrators and Manush - local West Bengal citizens had to flee or move out of the state for job.



Rajiv Gandhi and Mamata 

  

BJP spokesperson 

Syed Zafar Islam says, “It will be a historic performance, whether in West Bengal, Kerala, or Puducherry. We are expecting a clean sweep in Bengal. You will see that there will be surprising results in favour of the NDA even in Tamil Nadu. 

This will be a historic performance because people want a government that works in the interest of the public and the state." 


Grim mood at DMK HQ -- Stalin's party 'at No. 3' as per trends 

Amid early trends, a subdued atmosphere has set in at the DMK headquarters, with party cadres seen packing up and arrangements being dismantled. The shamiyana put up in the office is being taken down and chairs are being removed, signalling possible concern within the camp as counting progresses. 


In a stunning show, the BJP has crossed the 147 majority mark in Bengal against the ruling Trinamool Congress. Bengal has a total of 293 seats.



TVK is leading on 45, 

AIADMK on 41 and 

DMK on 19 seats, as per early trends.







The BJP was leading in eight assembly constituencies while the TMC was ahead in two, according to early trends available on the Election Commission website, as counting of votes for the West Bengal Assembly elections was underway on Monday.


The Bharatiya Gorkha Prajatantrik Morcha (BGPM), an ally of the Trinamool Congress (TMC) in the Darjeeling hills, was leading in Kalimpong.


As per EC data, BJP candidate Lakshmi Kanta Sau was leading in Jhargram with 5,156 votes, ahead of TMC’s Mongal Saren, who secured 4,180 votes, trailing by 976 votes.


In Monteswar, BJP’s Saikat Panja was leading over his TMC rival Siddiqullah Chowdhury by a margin of 3,486 votes in early rounds.

From Asansol Dakshin, BJP leader Agnimitra Paul was ahead, enjoying a margin of 6,271 votes over her TMC opponent.

The saffron party was also leading in Dinhata, Gosaba, Baghmundi, Bankura, Durgapur Purba

In contrast, in the Deganga constituency, TMC candidate Anisur Rahaman Bidesh was leading over his BJP rival by 2,184 votes.

The TMC was ahead in Kasba.



Assam Cops at job 


Keralam: Congress MP Shashi Tharoor says, "I think right now we've got enough contenders. What matters now is that there should be a change of government, a change of policy and a revival of Kerala.  


The first decisive trends from Cachar district continued to favour the BJP on Monday, with minister Kaushik Rai significantly extending his lead in the Lakhipur Assembly constituency after the second round of counting. 


Rai has secured 17,548 votes, leaving Congress candidate Dr M. Shanti Kumar Singha far behind at 1,303 votes. NOTA has received 538 votes so far. 


A similar trend is visible in Udharbond, where BJP candidate Rajdeep Goala has surged ahead after the second round with 11,964 votes. Congress candidate Ajit Singh trails with 5,675 votes, indicating a strong lead for the ruling party.



Triumph of BJP in West Bengal will be a "multi cause" for grand celebration ::: It's win against Islamic Demograhic intent, against Radicalisation... It's victory for Development, Hindutva and Nationalism

The mandate marks the end of a political journey as of now for a leader who had turned overnight cheerleader of chaos and anti-industry.

BJP leading in 159

Trinamool - 117. 

BJP leaders say --- It is the people of Bengal who wanted the change.  


The triumph of BJP in West Bengal is a 'multi cause of celebration' for its leaders and workers and millions of admirers - often called Modi Bhakts.






Mamata had boasted she will not allow SIR. It was a totally misplaced stance. Her opposition made cadres misdirected, perhaps the party organisation suffered. 

The wrong priorities overwhelmed her party's eco system and practically gheraoed their mindset.  


It may mark the end of 15 year rule of Mamata Banerjee. Prior to that the Leftists were in power for 34 years.

BJP was leading in 150 as counting was on and TMC leading in 105.


But it also a spectacular personal triumph for Suvendu Adhikari who had in 2021 made Mamata taste defeat in Nandigram but could not prevent her from coming to power. 

Today's win in Bhabhanipur would be a remarkable victory.


In 2006, the TMC won 10% of the seats in a local assembly election, while the left-wing coalition won nearly 80% of the seats. 

In national elections in 2004, the TMC won only one of the 42 seats of West Bengal state.



Once upon a time 


At one point of time Mamata  was considered something of a "political oddball". But she fought back and could oust the Left in 2011.



Pointers how Mamata has been different  


Unlike most politicians who quit the Congress party, Mamata Banerjee has not sheepishly returned to the party after the independent venture failed.  


But appreciation should also accompany the mention of some 'facts'. 


After 2006, she has been at the forefront of opposition to West Bengal's controversial policy of building Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in rural areas - a cause that won her much admiration in a state where large parts of the electorate still earn their living from the land. 


She got votes but essentially she opposed industry and harmed the youths. And 15 years as chief minister, she could not win the confidence of the industry and desi corporate honchos. 


Today, if the trends ultimately turn into results; is a day of celebration for Indian industry and manufacturing sector too. 









BJP takes lead in 150 in West Bengal, TMC in 103 :::: Lotus party way ahead in Assam; DMK ahead in Tamil Nadu :::::: Big Day in Indian Politics: The polls marked a watershed in the history of West Bengal, many said :::::

Mamata's citadel cracks

BJP leading in 9 in Kerala. That's significant.





Early trends from Malda show Congress' Mausam Noor leading


BJP candidate Agnimitra Paul leads in Asansol 

Dilip Ghosh leads in Kharagpur Sadar



According to  reports, the BJP was leading in six of the assembly seats in Malda district in West Bengal, while the TMC had an edge in four of the segments. 

In Bhabanipur, Mamata trailing 


Malda is among the districts which experienced some of the highest deletions during the SIR exercise.


Counting of votes for the elections to the Assemblies of Assam, Keralam, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Puducherry begins. Counting of votes for by-polls in seven Assembly constituencies of five States also being done today.

Udaynidhi (DMK) trailing in Tamil Nadu 


BJP takes crucial lead in West Bengal 

TMC leads in 67, 

BJP - 71

Assam BJP leading in 35, Congress - 8


In West Bengal, counting being done on 293 of the total 294 seats, as repolling to be done in Falta on May 21. 


In state capital Kolkata, counting for 11 assembly constituencies is being conducted across five locations 

-- Ballygunge Govt High School, Baba Saheb Ambedkar Education University, Sakhawat Memorial Govt Girls' High School, Netaji Indoor Stadium and St Thomas Boys' School. 




BJP leader Dilip Ghosh leading 



Suvendu Adhikari leading in both Babhabipur and Nandigram.


More than 2.5 lakh personnel of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs), along with state police, have been deployed, with the TMC and BJP engaging in a showdown outside several strongrooms, where EVMs were stored, in the run-up to the counting.  


Counting for high-stakes elections across 823 seats in four states and 1 UT   


West Bengal  recorded a historic voter turnout of 92.47% in the two phases, the highest ever in Bengal’s electoral history.

In 2011 election also there was huge turnout - around 84 per cent.


Assam voted in a single phase on April 9 and delivered an impressive 85.38% voter turnout, comfortably beating the 82.04% seen in 2021. The contest here is a straight two-horse race between Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma’s BJP-led NDA and a resurgent Congress.


Can Pinarayi Vijayan get a hattrick?

Kerala, which voted on April 23 in a single phase, is shaping up as one of the clearest indicator races of the day. 

The 140-seat assembly is currently held by the LDF (Left Democratic Front) led by Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan. His government rode to a historic back-to-back win in 2021, but in 2026 the headwinds are severe.






IN Assam, BJP ahead in 12 seats, Congress in 1 in very early trends 


BJP's Suvendu Adhikari leads in early postal ballot trends in Bhabanipur


 

Buddhadeb had failed in Bengal; Mamata replaced Left in 2011 :::: Move on to Kerala ... Vijayan-led Left increasingly embraced a corporatist approach, driven by the need to generate employment and growth.

The Leftists left West Bengal to Mamata Banerjee. It was a fit case of leaving the state of Bongs in the lurch. 

In Kerala, the incumbent chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan applied a different strategy. Here the Marxists have increasingly embraced a corporatist approach. It need not be out of choice.

And the compulsion was 'driven' by the need to generate employment and sustain growth. The result - much Transformation. 









On May 17, 2019, chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan stood at the London Stock Exchange and rang the ceremonial bell to mark the listing of Kerala Infrastructure Investment Fund Board (KIIFB) Masala Bonds. For a dyed-in-the-wool communist, it was an almost unthinkable thing to happen. 

Today, the stage is set for vote count and if Exit Polls predictions were correct, the CPI-M-led LDF will be shown the door after a decade - that is two terms in power. In more ways than one, it could be a 'different Kerala' than it was in 2016. 


However, as the politics always is; the "transformation" has its critics. 

Economist P A Mathew, a professor at Mysore Royal Academy Business School, described it as a “capitalist expedition",  according to 'New Indian Express'. 

The news paper reports that that the most dramatic shift in Kerala under Vijayan has been in higher education. 

“From opposing self-financing colleges to enabling private universities, the change is profound,” says Mathew, calling it a departure from core Marxist principles. 







“I was very confident we are going to win we are going to score a comfortable win of above 75 seats,” said Shashi Tharoor referring to the 140-member Assembly.


Several exit polls have predicted a UDF victory, potentially unseating the CPI(M)-led Left Democratic Front (LDF).  


Tharoor suggested the results could have wider political significance beyond Kerala.


“It will be the first time that the LDF is not in power anywhere in the country that will be a major development,” he said.


While exit polls back the UDF, Tharoor said he remains cautious about their accuracy. “We have to take into account gender, caste, class and regional disparities you never get a convincingly large enough sample,” he said.


Referring to reports from West Bengal, he added, “One polling company has said 60 per cent of people refused to answer. So, what is the worth of a poll where 60 per cent of your respondents have not answered?”


Polling for the Kerala Assembly was held on April 9. 


At the centre of leadership debate in Kerala are K. C. Venugopal, V. D. Satheesan and Ramesh Chennithala—each commanding distinct factions and influence.

For some time there was speculation about Shashi Tharoor as well but his 'alleged' soft corner for the Modi Govt vis-a-vis Operation Sndoor had perhaps spoiled his chance.


Venugopal, a Lok Sabha MP from Alappuzha and a close aide of Rahul Gandhi, is seen as the high command’s trusted hand. His strategic advice in 2019—when Gandhi chose to contest from Wayanad after sensing trouble in Amethi—continues to bolster his stature within the party.

He is now AICC general secretary in-charge organisation.  


Satheesan, the Leader of Opposition in the state assembly, has built his claim through aggressive campaigning and direct attacks on Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan. His strong base in Ernakulam and control over a section of MLAs could work to his advantage.


Chennithala, the veteran face among the three, remains in the fray with his experience and organizational backing, though questions persist about his ability to command legislative support in a post-election scenario.


The Congress high command has, for now, kept its cards close to its chest.


ends 


Kolkata "Mahanagar's" mandate against Mamata Banerjee --- Rise and Fall of a bathroom slipper-wearing woman from a lower middle class background

"Mahanagar" is a Satyajit Ray master piece. As the name suggests - 'Big City' --- the film portrays contradictions of a me...