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  rohit
Namesake Review from NYTimes
Here is a pretty glowing review of THE NAMESAKE from New York Times. Has anyone (I know Geetanjali has) seen it here?

Would love a review!

Rohit
-

March 9, 2007

MOVIE REVIEW | 'THE NAMESAKE'

Modernity and Tradition at a Cultural Crossroads
By STEPHEN HOLDEN

Color is the stuff of life in the movies of Mira Nair, the Indian-born director whose newest film, “The Namesake,” follows two generations of a Bengali family from late-1970s Calcutta to New York City. Her lush palette lends her films a throbbing physicality that invites you to step into the screen and embrace the sensuous here and now.

“The Namesake,” adapted from Jhumpa Lahiri’s popular novel, conveys a palpable sense of people as living, breathing creatures who are far more complex than their words might indicate. The story of upwardly mobile immigrants torn between tradition and modernity as they are absorbed into the American melting pot has been told in countless movies.

This variation is gentle and compassionate. The longing for roots of these displaced middle-class Indians lends a soulful undertow to a film conspicuously lacking in melodrama.

Ms. Nair has a sympathetic collaborator in Sooni Taraporevala, the Indian screenwriter who also wrote her first two features, “Salaam Bombay!” (1988) and “Mississippi Masala” (1991). Its steady, unhurried pace, its fascination with the rituals of daily life and its deep respect for characters who are continually evolving lift “The Namesake” above high-end soap opera. It may lack epic grandeur, but by the end you feel you know these people well enough to keep in step with their internal rhythms.

The film has a crackling star performance by Kal Penn (from the clever trash comedy “Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle”), who brings an offhanded charisma to the role of Gogol, the first-born child of Ashima (Tabu), a classically trained singer, and Ashoke Ganguli (Irrfan Khan), an aspiring engineer, who move to America in 1977 after their arranged marriage in Calcutta.

Alone together in a foreign land in the middle of winter, the shy, polite newlyweds are virtual strangers, and the movie captures their delicate process of mutual accommodation. Ashima’s initiation into American culture has gentle, humorous moments. She is astonished to discover gas stoves that work 24 hours a day and learns the hard way that wool sweaters should not be dumped into a washing machine.

A prologue looks back to a turning point in Ashoke’s life. During a train trip in 1974 to visit his grandfather, a friendly stranger advises him to leave India and see the world. Ashoke is reading “The Overcoat,” the famous story by the Russian writer Nikolai Gogol, who spent much of his life outside his homeland. When the train crashes later in the trip, Ashoke miraculously survives, and the Gogol story becomes a totem in his life, a symbolic tie to his homeland and an omen of good luck.

Years later when his son is born, Ashoke is told that the baby cannot leave the hospital without a name. In India several years might pass before a child is given a formal name, chosen by the maternal grandmother. Ashoke impulsively calls his son Gogol. As the boy grows up, his ambivalence about his temporary name, which he embraces, then rejects (his formal name is Nikhil), becomes a metaphor for his divided cultural identity.

In high school Gogol rebels from his family and behaves like a typical pot-smoking, rock-’n’-roll-loving American teenager. On a visit to Calcutta he sneers at Indian ways. After studying architecture at Yale, he falls in love with Maxine (Jacinda Barrett), a stereotypical blonde WASP princess from Long Island. Cultural tensions flare when he brings her home to meet his family, and the couple are expected to withhold any expressions of physical affection, according to Indian tradition.

Gogol eventually falls in love with Moushumi (Zuleikha Robinson), a beautiful Bengali woman who lived a freewheeling life in Paris before coming to the United States. His female counterpart, she is as culturally confused as he is, and the relationship runs into trouble.

Despite all the tensions in the Ganguli household, “The Namesake” expresses a reassuring faith in family solidarity. Avoiding the cliché of pitting disobedient immigrant children in pitched battles against tradition-bound parents from the old country, the film assumes that blood ties are the strongest bonds holding together the social order.

In the second half of the movie the Ganguli parents step into the background as the focus shifts to Gogol. But instead of disappearing, Ashoke and Ashima loom as dignified, stabilizing pillars of tolerance and devotion whom their son and his younger sister, Sonia (Sahira Nair), cherish, even as they reject the old ways.

“The Namesake” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). It has mild sexual situations.

THE NAMESAKE

Opens today in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Toronto.

Directed by Mira Nair; written by Sooni Taraporevala, based on the novel by Jhumpa Lahiri; director of photography, Frederick Elmes; edited by Allyson C. Johnson; music by Nitin Sawhney; production designer, Stephanie Carroll; produced by Lydia Dean Pilcher and Ms. Nair; released by Fox Searchlight. Running time: 122 minutes.

WITH: Kal Penn (Gogol), Tabu (Ashima), Irrfan Khan (Ashoke), Jacinda Barrett (Maxine), Zuleikha Robinson (Moushumi) and Sahira Nair (Sonia).

Link to article: http://movies2.nytimes.com/2007/03/09/movies/09name.html?pagewanted=print
posted 2 years ago ( permalink )
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Reply from: Geetanjali
Thanks for the post Rohit. I enjoyed this movie immensely. I am a big Mira Nair fan and so I am predisposed to like her work. The film moved me on many levels - visually, musically, and emotionally. As an immigrant, but also having lived most of my life in the US, this film touched me deeply. Mira tells a story, as the NY Times says, while avoiding the easy immigrant cliches. I thought the performances by Tabu and Irfaan Khan were stellar.

I found this to be a beautiful, moving film. Definately worth checking out!
Originally posted at 3:38pm, Mar 9, 2007 PST
Geetanjali edited this discussion 2 years ago
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Reply from: Aakash
I've read many N. American review of The Namesake and although the the film as a whole has received somem good and some bad reviews...there has always been one stand-out constant: Tabu. I have yet to read a review (and i've read almost a dozen) that does not take time out to give honorable mention to Tabu's masterful portrayal in her maturity and progression.

I have yet to see the film, but for those who have ... would you go as far as saying that Tabu's performance may fetch her an Oscar Nomination next year? I really haven't seen any one gain so much respect so quickly across seas as Tabu has in this one performance.
posted 2 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: Geetanjali
Tabu was brilliant - quietly so, even keeled and yet expressing intense emotion in her eyes and well timed pauses.

In today's Chicago Tribune article, when asked about Tabu, Mira Nair says -

" I've known her for many years. She's like kind of our Cate Blanchett or our young Meryl Streep in the Bollywood world. She's a Bollywood star, one of the few, who [also] does incredibly brave independent films. She's won at least two [Indian Oscars]. She makes not only films in Hindi - which is the lingua franca of the Bollywood stuff - but also makes films in South India, which is a whole other language."

I don't think she'll win an academy award, but through this exposure in the US maybe some very smart director will cast her in a meaty role where her talent can continue to shine.

Full article here:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-0703090364mar11,1,1556639.story?track=rss&ctrack=1&cset=true
Originally posted at 10:12am, Mar 11, 2007 PDT
Geetanjali edited this discussion 2 years ago
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Reply from: rohit
Aakash: I am glad you brought up Tabu! I can't tell you how great it is to see a mainstream Bollywood actress getting this kind of universal accolade in western media. Considering that Bollywood is known for "non-acting" it's a little bit of vindication that we have players who have the chops to compare to the best of the best, in the international circuit. :)

Geetanjali: I'm totally jealous that you've seen it! I hope to see it soon...once I do, I'll post a review on Jaman.
posted 2 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: mahindru3
I've seen it Rohit. Just been lazy to post my review. But I've posted it now, check it out.
posted 2 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: vkartoos
Numbers are not that hot in the box office though. $248K in the opening weekend, $276K till date, but hopefully it will pick up after opening in more cities. Refer: http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=namesake.htm
posted 2 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: carla
I saw *The Namesake* last weekend and posted a review on my blog the other day - here's the link: http://www.filmigeek.net/2007/03/the_namesake_20.html
posted 2 years agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: vipul_7279

posted 1 year agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: hulisurf

that was a pretty good movie but I liked the book better!

posted 7 months agoFlag this reply?
Reply from: ObsidianVue

I read the novel, The Namesake, that the film is based on and didn't find the character sketch of second generation diaspora quite convincing. I realize that the writer Lahiri was trying to capture some degree of aimless-ness in the path of these characters but it didn't quite gel in the narrative structure. If you've already read one of her three works, it seems as if she's treading the same territory over and over again when you move onto the next piece.

However Lahiri's portrayal of first generation immigrants to America is extremely poignant. When I read Nair's interview of adapting The Namesake, I felt she was improving upon a slightly weak narrative structure by focusing on the parents rather than the children in the novel.

I haven't seen the film yet but my mother absolutely adored this film (so much so that my sister gave her a DVD of the film) and a Pakistani friend of mine from graduate school implored me to see it. Unfortunately, it was whisked out of the theatres too quickly for me to catch it on the big screen.

posted 3 months agoFlag this reply?


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