Film — Siddhartha

Shashi Kapoor plays the titular role, and he does so with a rare, weathered grace. Siddhartha is a man of extremes: first an ascetic Samana who starves himself of all pleasure, then a wealthy lover who drowns in it. Kapoor navigates this arc without losing the character’s core dignity. He is neither a saint nor a fool; he is simply a man searching for the "Atman" (the inner self) in a world that refuses to give him a straight answer.

We often talk about "spiritual journeys" as something quiet, internal, and deeply personal. But what does that journey actually look like? In 1972, director Conrad Rooks attempted to answer that question with his luminous adaptation of Hermann Hesse’s cult-classic novel, Siddhartha . film siddhartha

Siddhartha is not a movie you "watch." It is a movie you sit with . It asks the same question the novel asks: Can wisdom be taught, or must it be lived? Shashi Kapoor plays the titular role, and he

For those who have only read the book, the idea of a film adaptation might feel daunting. Hesse’s prose is lyrical, philosophical, and introspective—hardly the stuff of blockbuster cinema. Yet, Rooks’ film, starring Shashi Kapoor in a career-defining role, is a hidden gem that deserves to be pulled out of the dusty archives of 70s counterculture cinema. He is neither a saint nor a fool;