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Archive for the 'Film' Category

What Do Richard Gere and George W. Bush Have in Common?

Article published on May 2nd, 2007 | 1 Comment | Trackback | Categories »

We’ve all heard about the uproar that American actor Richard Gere caused last month in India when he kissed Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty at an AIDS awareness event. I entirely agree that the Indians who were burning Gere in effigy were overreacting and that putting out a warrant for his arrest is ridiculous.

The whole incident is indicative of how India is undergoing its own sexual revolution right now, just as the United States did in the 1960s and 1970s. (Remember, there was once a time in the United States when TV shows depicted husband and wife sleeping in separate beds.) The norms of Indian society are rapidly changing, and Indians are divided between those who are moving with the times and those who hold steadfast to tradition. The Indians at the AIDS awareness event seemed to be laughing at the kissing episode. They didn’t seem to have a problem with it. On the other hand, the more conservative elements in society were infuriated. Gere had it right when he said on The Daily Show:

“There is a very small right-wing, very conservative political party in India and they are the moral police in India … they do this kind of thing quite often.”

And speaking of right-wing conservatives, when I saw the Gere-Shetty kissing incident, I couldn’t help thinking of the “massage” that U.S. President George W. Bush’s gave German Chancellor Angela Merkel last summer at the G8 conference. Just like Merkel, Shetty was taken by surprise—she had a startled expression on her face and she lost her balance. Perhaps the lesson to be learned is that boorish frat-boy antics, whether from Bush, Gere or any other man, don’t go over very well.

 

The Namesake, a Review

Article published on Mar 12th, 2007 | 1 Comment | Trackback | Categories »
So I watched The Namesake this weekend. There’s too much in it to give it a short review, so I’ll start by summarizing it in a sentence: It’s absolutely brilliant. From the larger-than-life characters to Nitin Sawhney’s score to great shots of Calcutta, the Taj and India.Mira Nair, of Monsoon Wedding fame, has outdone herself. She has stepped outside of hackneyed traditions of filmography that cater only to teeny Desi Americans with saccharine charms of being “born confused.” Nair’s is a more American movie while at the same time being a tale of the immigrant experience. And more impressively, she manages to do this, without straying too far from Jhumpa Lahiri’s very popular novel.
namesake
(Continue on to read a semi-spoiler review.)
Ashima (Tabu) is a marriageable Bengali teenager who delights in English literature, takes an immediate liking to her desh-returned suitor from America, Ashoke Ganguli (Irfan Khan). The couple relocates to America, and Tabu struggles with alien weather, technologies, and etiquette (sometimes the lack thereof). An important backdrop to this are a fateful train conversation and a subsequent accident which configure a relationship between Khan and the Russian writer Gogol, whom Khan adores.
While Khan is buried in the pages of Gogol’s Overcoat, he is interrupted by another Bengali passenger who inspires him to travel to America and see the world. Overcoat was also the book on whose pages the flashlight of rescue workers shone, as Khan lay buried
Read the rest of this entry »

 

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