The highly metaphorical work had been staged in the past by several famous theatre groups like the Bohurupee of all-time great Shambhu Mitra and Tripti Mitra.
Bohurupee's was the first stage adaptation of the dance-drama back in 1954 while the latest stage presentation was made in 2010, directed by Goutam Haldar.
Amitabh Bhattacharya's directorial venture will have stage and film co-existing to present an altogether new experience.
"We are daring to open a fresh dialogue with Tagore and trying to evaluate the present condition through interpretation of the text while conforming to the format and essence of the original," the young director told PTI.
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"My character Nandini is a modern-day girl wearing specs and she is like a typical university-going girl, a revolutionary, definitely a Marxist, who is not bothered about fashion but how the country should be run," Sorcar said on location of the shooting here.
The director, who was standing by her side, interjected, "The film interpretation will have Nandini who looks like a typical JU student, an idealistic and simple girl, who talks in commonplace dialect but in pure, unadulterated Bengali."
Red is the recurring theme of the play, inspired by the image of a red oleander plant crushed by a discarded piece of iron that Tagore had come across while walking through Shillong streets.
The filmmaker said, "Debojyoti Mishra has used the
Rabindra Sangeet 'Poush Toder Daak Diyechhe' to define that mood of joy and freedom. We are deciding on other songs also.
"In my 'Raktakarabi' the stage play shot will be taken in a heritage Bengali theatre, and the film adapatation at modern day houses and studio floors and in some rural settings and the two strands of stage production and real life will run parallel, side by side," he added.
"The Tagore work deals with unscrupulous capitalism, environmental exploitation and the importance of human relationships and these things have not been obscured with the passage of time but became more pertinent in today's world," he explained.
"The poet himself had said in his 'Sesher Kobita' that he was not being interpreted the way he himself would have liked to be."
The director said he had consulted noted Tagore scholars as well as veteran actors like Kaushik Sen and Shantilal Mukhopadhyay before embarking on the project.
"Being able to play Nandini is like a dream come true and I am nervous," the vivacious actress said.