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Reviews
My Son the Fanatic (1997)
My Son the Fanatic deserves applause for it's originality and honesty at portraying south asians in the west
My Son the Fanatic was a surprizing treat. I never heard of it before renting at blockbuster last night. I don't think it ever played in Toronto theatres. Never the less I must applaud at Hanif Kureshi's yet again bold and honest attempt at highlighting a recent phenomenon in the South Asian community: the son going "holier than thou" on the family. This film touched me personally because in my case the opposite happened; my father turned fanatic muslim on me. Hanif Qureshi's "My Beautiful Laundrette" is one of my favourite films of all time and after "Budha of Suburbia" I fell in love with this brilliant man and his work. "My Son" is a lot less shocking but still weaves it's way through the father and son conflict elegantly and I am shocked at how blind the Oscar nominators are when it comes to Om Puri's brilliant acting! This is the first film portraying South Asians where the wife has some personality and actually speaks out so I see her as a mother, a wife and a woman that I know because she exists in my community. She is dull and fat and stuck in her little world within the four walls of her home. I dislike her but I know her. The subtle emotions and body language of this lower middle-class family might not be fully understood by a non-south asian critic and that is why some find it moves slowly sometimes. I could not agree with Earnest Hardy more when he says this film (and others by the writer) "endorse a morality of compassion". I think that is the only moral value worth pushing!
Earth (1998)
Brings understanding to probably one of the most misunderstood conflicts of the world.
Someone stated that Deepa is making films for the "western audience". This film proves them blatently wrong. I took 18 of my friends of all ethnicities and backgrounds to watch this film and they enjoyed it and loved it! It is a film made for both sides of the Pak-India border and does not "sell-out" to the west!It sheds light on this most misunderstood (by the west) conflict between India and Pakistan. 7 million muslims and 5 million hindus were killed in this partition and millions of other minorities as well. This film is the first to look at this bloody mess left by the British colonials from the eyes of the people most affected... the working class, the lower class... the poor! From personal friendships to politics to love... it is beautiful.
Hamam (1997)
If ever there has been a film about awakening out of a quietly miserable, ignorant, stagnant life... this is it. MAGIC!
I went to see this film knowing nothing about it whatsoever. From the first heart-wrenching musical note to the heart-breaking end ... I was mesmerized.
The actors are beautiful. They exude intelligent sexuality (if there is such a thing). There is the sense of being entrapped in a circular miserable existence with all the money and the necessities of life but no soul... A married couple works out their banal existence; evolves.
The magic of Turkey and the showering of loving hospitality is reflective of the people from that part of the world. This film is honest, romantic, sensual, intelligent, serene and detailed. This film should have won it's well-deserved Oscar!