In many ways, Byomkesh Bakshi is the opposite of Sherlock Holmes or C Auguste Dupin. He is not Bengali by birth. Hailing from Munger district of Bihar,
As far as films are concerned, Byomkesh Bakshi has been the target of several directors in the last few years. Anjan Dutta revived the genre with his Byomkesh Bakshi (2010) based on the novel 'Adim Ripu' while Rituparno Ghosh's last film before his death was Satyanweshi (2015) based on the novel of the same name.
In Bengali, these films revived the long-lost love for the intellectual detective. Dibakar Bannerjee, another Bengali, sought to turn Byomkesh Bakshi into a pan-Indian icon with his Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! (2015). The film, a cross between the comic book genre and pulp fiction noir, appealed to a new generation growing up on Marvel and DC franchises while adding a touch of the dark to the clean rationalising of the Bhadralok detective. As of today, there have been 11 feature films (10 in Bengali, one in Hindi) and four television series based on Saradindu Bannerjee's famed 'truth seeker'. Hindi cinema's biggest producers, Yash Raj Films, have already latched on to the idea of a Byomkesh Bakshi franchise. They have bought the rights to some of the most important novels of the canon, and are all set for a sequel to Dibakar Bannerjee's film. Yet, they remain outsiders to a canon that is worshipped and remains popular in Bengal.
The famous detective is also a man out of place. In Dibakar Banerjee's film, Byomkesh constantly finds himself either accosted or thrown out by the authorities. He is constantly made to feel that he does not belong. The only place he finds himself welcome in is the home of Anirudh Guha, his Moriarty.
Yet, following Raymond Chandler's adage, Byomkesh Bakshi goes 'down these mean streets a man must go; who is not himself mean, who is neither tarnished nor afraid'. It is here that the contemporary nature of the character emerges. As Dibakar Banerjee put it in an interview, 'I think that Byomkesh’s strength lies in the fact that Saradindu took a Western form and made it completely his own. Indian, rooted in its time and place, populated with deep insights of character and setting that give the reader a fantastic mix of the familiar yet shockingly new in every story.'
But the familiar is not enough for the modern audience. With the ever-pervasive presence of the internet and geo-tagging, the intellectual capacities of Byomkesh Bakshi seem out of place and out of time. Basu Chatterjee selected Rajit Kapur as his Byomkesh during a more innocent time of landline telephones and national television. Sushant Singh Rajput's detective is almost a global superhero, as he thwarts an Axis plan to protect the country during World War II. To attract the post-millennial, something more than the intrigues of a common murder needed to be put together.
The legendary Satyajit Ray was the first to try and adapt the character to screen with Chiriyakhana (1967). Starring Uttam Kumar as the famous detective, the film was a washout and was criticised as a farce by many. Satyajit Ray, however, had written a descriptor of his story specifically stating that 'It is not one for the Bond addicts'! In 2015, when Sushant Singh Rajput introduced himself as 'Bakshy. Byomkesh Bakshy', it was a departure from one master and a nod to the famous British secret agent. It was also a marker that Bengal's most famous detective is no longer the outsider in mainstream Hindi cinema.