November 22, 2007

Shakespeare Wallah

When I visited the little local library near my parents' place when I was home recently, I came across a DVD I'd been wanting to watch for some time, the Merchant Ivory film Shakespeare Wallah. It was every bit as good as I had hoped it would be.

I've been writing some more extensive thoughts about the film at my new blog. Rather than reposting it all here, I will link you to those articles:

Star-Crossed Lovers
With the Bible in One Hand, and Shakespeare in the Other
Mute Testimonials
When Art is Overtaken By Popular Culture

The themes of postcolonialism and the interaction between traditional art and popular culture are nicely represented in the interplay between Shakespeare and Bollywood in the film.  It was a very enjoyable movie, and I think it will stay in my mind for a very long time.

Posted by poetically challenged at 09:26:00 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

November 13, 2007

Li An's Eat Drink Man Woman

I was very pleased to find Li An's (Ang Lee's) film Eat Drink Man Woman at my local library recently.  The movie is really nicely made (true of most of Lee's movies).  

Eat Drink Man Woman is a story about a man raising his three daughters alone, his wife having died when they were just girls.  THe issues explored are very relevant to contemporary Chinese culture.  It includes the look at the changes that happen in Chinese families when the younger generations leave traditional Chinese beliefs and traditions in favor of things considered "newer" within the Chinese context, a widowed individual considering remarriage, changing sexual mores, and the various complex family relationships and roles within Chinese families.  

These various changes are explored through daughters who have different religious beliefs from the traditions of the parents.  One daughter is a Christian, and faces some amount of disdain from those around her family (though her immediate family seems quite willing to allow her to do as she pleases).  The younger two daughters seem to be non-religious, as perhaps the father has become, though in most other ways he seems very stuck to traditional Chinese thinking and practices.  Of course, with the surprise announcement he brings at the end of the film, we begin to realize that he has changed from a traditional mindset in ways that are unexpected in the earlier parts of the film.

I liked the various twists, and really enjoyed seeing the various interpersonal relationships, all presented from a very Chinese perspective.  There is a good reason that Eat Drink Man Woman was so popular when it came out.  It is a meaningful film, and well worth taking the time to watch.


Posted by poetically challenged at 12:15:38 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

November 07, 2007

The Local Library

I am in the US visiting my parents at the moment, and came across a pleasant surprise.  I went to the local library, which is not an especially big establishment, and came across the film Shakespeare Wallah.  I've been wanting to watch this movie (an Indian film) for some time, but had not yet found it at a price I was willing to pay.  I'm really pleased to have gotten it while I was at the library... even though I've been to busy to watch it so far.

I was also pleased to find that there are several Chinese films I had been having trouble finding, including The Shower.  I plan to watch them before I need to return them in a couple of days.  I had no idea that the library in this little town had Chinese or Indian movies either one, and it has been a very pleasant surprise to be able to bring them home.
Posted by poetically challenged at 09:35:33 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |