Mostofa Sarwar Farooki and screenwriter Anisul Haque had previously collaborated on a number of television serials such as Ekannaborti. Given a five-page synopsis by Farooki, Haque wrote approximately three drafts of the script, not counting minor revisions.[1]
Bachelor was also television director Farooki's feature film directorial debut. He had neither formal training in film nor practical experience with it. Reflecting on the filming four films later, in 2012, he said, "At that time I had no video monitor, and couldn't really see anything, so it was difficult for me to understand the medium."[4] "I had a hard time crafting my images."[5] It was an opportunity for him to make mistakes and learn from them.[5]
Release
Bachelor was released at Balaka cinema hall in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 29 January 2004.[6] Two days later, on Eid al-Adha, it was broadcast on Bangladeshi television network Channel i, a sister firm of production company Impress Telefilm.[3] It did not receive a wide theatrical distribution outside Bangladesh, but was shown at two festivals, Asiatica Film Mediale in Rome and the Third Eye Asian Film Festival in Mumbai.[7]
The film was widely watched by the Bangladeshi middle class, according to professor in media and communication Zakir Hossain Raju.[7] The story of romantic relationships among urban youths resonated with the young generation.[4] Harun ur Rashid, writing in The Daily Star, said it marked a "'Good-bye' to the cliché melodramatic dhishoom-dhishoom movies" audiences were accustomed to.[3] Matthew Scott, summarizing Farooki's output for Agence France Presse a decade later, wrote, "What makes Farooki's work different is its contemporary take on the lives and troubles of young Bangladeshis."[8]
^ abLiz Shackleton (17 October 2012). "Mostofa S. Farooki". Screen International. I made my first film Bachelor in 2002. I regard my first two films as an education process, as I'd never been to any university or assisted any director.