Monthly Archives: January 2014

Monsoon Wedding (2001)

Monsoon Wedding 
Directed by Mira Nair
Written by Sabrina Dhawan
2001/India/USA/Italy/Germany/France
IFC Productions; Mirabai Films; Keyfilms Roma; Paradis Films

First viewing/Netflix rental
#993 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDb users say 7.3/10; I say 8.5/10

[box] Pimmi Verma: This wedding is driving me nuts.[/box]

I’m a sucker for romances and domestic dramas and this delivers in a big way on both counts.

Devoted but irascible family man Lalit Verma is preparing for the big Punjabi wedding of his daughter Aditi at his home in New Delhi.  On hand is goofy, quasi-hip wedding planner P.K. Dubey.  Aditi’s marriage is semi-arranged and she has not yet broken off her affair with her married boss.  Lalit’s niece Rai is not pleased to see her uncle at the wedding or his attentions to one of the little girls.  Meanwhile, various flirtations and small conflicts go on within the large extended family.

While Aditi is deciding what to do with her life, P.K. becomes infatuated with the beautiful family domestic Alice.  It is not giving away too much to say that the whole thing ends with at least one glorious wedding in the rain.

A Punjabi wedding looks like so much fun, I was wondering how I could get invited to one! The film is a very interesting mash-up of traditional and Western influences   Many of the guests and the bridegroom are home from abroad for the wedding.  But the primary impulse is a celebration of “Indian-ness”.

The film could be faulted for one too many love at first sight sub-plots but not by me.  The subtitles I used translated the Punjabi and Hindi dialogue but not the English.  Since I could not quite catch a lot of the extensive English due to the accents, possibly I was missing out.  However, between the visuals and what I did understand the film played on my heart like a violin.  Recommended.

Trailer

 

And on to 1939 …

1939 was a very bad year for humanity but a great year for Hollywood movies.

Some of the most beloved films ever made were released in 1939, including Gone With the WindThe Hunchback of Notre DameMr. Smith Goes to WashingtonNinotchkaStagecoachThe Wizard of Oz and Wuthering Heights. In France, both Marcel Carné’s Daybreak (aka Le Jour Se Lève) and Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game were released. Other major classic films in 1939 included Beau GesteDark VictoryDestry Rides AgainLove AffairOnly Angels Have WingsGunga DinMidnightOf Mice and MenThe WomenYoung Mr. Lincoln, and many more.

In other entertainment news, television was formally introduced at the New York World’s Fair in Queens where The Radio Corporation of America (RCA) unveiled a display of its first TV sets for sale to the American public and CBS began broadcasting.  After his momentous radio adaptation of H.G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds on Halloween night 1938, Orson signed an unprecedented contract with RKO Pictures in 1939. It was a two-year, two-picture contract as producer-director-writer-actor, in which Welles reserved complete control over all aspects of two productions of his own choosing, including “final cut,” as long as he remained within the studio-approved schedule and budget.

In U.S. news, African-American singer Marian Anderson performed before 75,000 people at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., after having been denied the use both of Constitution Hall by the Daughters of the American Revolution, and of a public high school by the federally controlled District of Columbia.  On September 5, President Roosevelt declared U.S. neutrality in World War II.  Albert Einstein wrote to the President about developing the atomic bomb using uranium. This leads to the creation of the Manhattan Project.

Lou Gehrig gave his last public speech, following a diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). In it, he says, “Today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth.”  This would be memorably re-enacted in The Pride of the Yankees (1942).   Nylon stockings went on sale for the first time anywhere in Wilmington, Delaware.

The Spanish Civil War ended when Francisco Franco assumed power in March.  On August 23, the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was signed between Germany and the Soviet Union, a neutrality treaty that also agreed to division of spheres of influence (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, eastern Poland and Bessarabia (today Moldova), north-east province of Romania to the Soviet Union; Lithuania and western Poland to Germany).

World War II began when Germany and the Soviet Union attacked Poland and Britain, France, India, Australia and new Zealand declared war on Germany on September 3rd.   On November 30, Soviet forces attacked Finland and reached the Mannerheim Line, starting the Winter War.

 

Montage of stills from Oscar-Winning films of 1939

Montage of stills from all 1939 films nominated for Oscars