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The other night I left the house to catch MONSOON WEDDING with the incomparable Frank DeCaro's comment from THE DAILY SHOW about MOULIN ROUGE! still echoing in my ears: "This film looks like someone set Liberace on fire and turned him loose in an Indian Restaurant."
Hey, that sounds like MONSOON WEDDING, too.
Mira
Nair's vivid, joyous MONSOON WEDDING is so infectious,
so colorful, so exhilarating, that you almost forget
that at its core, it's merely a curry-inflected remake
of Father of the Bride, with snippets of other
films thrown in. The main plot involves the arranged
marriage of Aditi (Vasundhara Das), to Houston engineer
Hemant Rai (Parvin Dabas). Aditi, who is less virginal
than she looks, is consenting to this marriage merely
because she is tired of waiting for her unctuous TV
show lover to leave his wife. As the families begin
to gather for the wedding, subplots emerge. Aditi's
cousin Ria (Shefali Shetty) seems merely to be jealous,
but in fact has a darker secret, one which threatens
to explode again as history appears to be repeating
itself during the pre-wedding festivities. Aditi's
parents Lalit Verma (Naseeruddin Shah) and his wife
Pimmi (Lillete Dubey), while dealing with the frenzy
of an upper-middle-class wedding, are also grappling
with the unconventional nature of their only son,
who enjoys dancing and wants to be a chef. Another
cousin, Ayesha (the spectacularly beautiful Neha Dubey),
seems interested in Rahul (the equally spectacularly
beautiful Randeep Hooda), yet another cousin just
back from school in Australia. And in the midst of
all the pre-wedding hysteria is the film's comic relief
in the person of wedding planner P.K. Dubey (Vijay
Raaz), a Hindi Charlie Chaplin who is besotted with
the Lalit's family maid Alice (Tilotama Shome).
If
this is all starting to sound like a Robert Altman
film, it's no accident. Like Altman's The Wedding,
Nair's film uses the interweaving of relationships,
rather than any kind of plot trajectory, to tell her
story. There is really no suspense here; the family's
Deep Dark Secret is absurdly obvious to the viewer
(in a jarringly distasteful note amidst the colorful
proceedings) and the film's joyful verve indicates
that there will be a happy ending, even when it seems
otherwise. Unlike Altman's films, however, these characters
become distinctive very early on, and it's easy to
tell who's whom (without the "who's who" distraction
of a star-studded ensemble like Gosford
Park, a film to which this will inevitably
be compared). Indeed, MONSOON WEDDING owes a debt
to every film about wedding preparations ever made,
from The Wedding Banquet even unto Sixteen
Candles. There are Shakespearean plot elements
of Much Ado about Nothing and A Midsummer
Night's Dream, the latter most evident in a stunning
engagement party sequence, shot by Declan Quinn (Aidan's
brother) as fraught with starry-eyed romantic magic.
Nair
clearly loves her homeland, and this film does for
India what Witness did for the Amish. The close
family relationships and the sensuality of the wedding
preparations show Western culture as cold, remote,
and hopelessly tightassed by comparision. Let's not
forget that this is the culture which brought us Tantra,
thus elevating sexual fulfillment into an important
component of spirituality. Nair's India is a hallucinogenic
kaleidoscope of colors and scents and textures and
motion. The bright oranges, reds and golds of the
wedding attire, the metallic threads in smooth saris
laid out in a local storefront, the bustle of the
marketplace, Ayesha's flirtatiously erotic party dance,
wonderful wedding rituals such as the decoration of
the bride's hands with henna, are so vividly rendered
that the film often seems rendered in "smell-o-vision"
(papadum nachos, anyone?). The much-parodied Bollywood
"burst-into-song-for-no-particular-reason" genre is
on ample display here, but here it seems that the
traditional music of India, which often sounds like
mere screeching to Western ears, has been infused
with Western scales, the result being catchy, happy
songs with a dancy, technopop feel. If you leave this
film without wanting to run out and buy the soundtrack
CD immediately, you'd better check your own pulse.
The
cast of actors, unknown to most of us in the West, are consistently fine,
even if Vijay Raaz' Dubey occasionally goes a bit over-the-top into Roberto
Benigni territory. What I love about this cast is how utterly real the
women are. Pimmi's middle-aged tummy rolls are proudly displayed, one
hugely overweight family member (who looks like an inflated Ann Miller)
joins the younger women in a playfully suggestive dance at a women's party
for the bride. This wonderful scene celebrates four generations of women's
shared experiences, and is one of the film's most powerful moments. Even
Aditi, whose olive eyes suggest a mixed ethnic heritage, is plump by Western
standards for a leading lady. Tilotama Shome as Alice has one of those
fascinating faces that goes from plain to beautiful from one shot to the
next. The men, however, are painted a bit more broadly. Vijay Raaz is
no one's idea of a romantic dream, but arranged marriage seems a pretty
darned attractive proposition when the groom is presented in the person
of the tall, dark and handsome Parvin Dabas. Switch these two roles around,
and you'd have a much different film.
Yet
despite the film's lush exoticism, the film also conveys just how universal
its themes are; the ambivalence of parents marrying off their oldest child;
an aging mother weaving a tapestry of guilt wondering aloud when her son
is going to find a bride; the conflicts of cultural tradition vs. modernity.
When Dubey's mother is nagging him about finding a bride and giving her
a little happiness before she dies, the multi-ethnic audience in the theatre
nodded and laughed in unison.
MONSOON WEDDING is in Hindi, Punjabi and English, with lightning-quick shifts between languages, seemingly in mid-sentence. As a result, it's possible to miss some of the dialogue, especially in the early scenes, before we become accustomed to the language. Additional subtitles would have been helpful.
The word "charming" has been overused
in film commentary these days, most recently in the
context of the cloyingly adorable Amelie, an
arch, contrived film constantly aware of its own preciousness.
MONSOON WEDDING is utterly without artifice; a film
that invites the viewer to become part of its big,
noisy, boisterous, dysfunctional, but loving family.
-- Jill Cozzi |