Sulanga Enu Pinisa, known internationally as The Forsaken Land, is a haunting masterpiece of world cinema that marked the arrival of Vimukthi Jayasundara as a major force in Sri Lankan filmmaking. Released in 2005, the film achieved significant historical milestones, most notably winning the Caméra d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. It remains one of the most provocative and visually arresting explorations of the psychological toll of the Sri Lankan Civil War, choosing to focus on the stillness of a "no-war, no-peace" period rather than the violence of the battlefield.
The narrative follows several interconnected characters who inhabit this wasteland. There is Anura, a soldier guarding a remote outpost that seems to have no strategic value; his sister Soma, who seeks emotional escape; and a local monk who struggles with his own spiritual detachment. Their lives are characterized by a profound sense of inertia. In The Forsaken Land, the absence of active combat does not mean the presence of peace; instead, it reveals a moral and social vacuum where human connections have withered.
Critically, Jayasundara avoids traditional storytelling tropes. There are no heroes or villains, only survivors drifting through a landscape of landmines and memories. The dialogue is sparse, allowing the sound design—the whistling wind, distant crows, and the mechanical hum of military equipment—to carry the emotional weight. This minimalist approach forces the viewer to confront the same boredom and existential dread experienced by the characters.