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The Namesake
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Directed by Mira Nair.
A couple coming to terms with living in a new culture discover their troubles are compounded by their son in this drama from filmmaker Mira Nair. Ashoke (Irfan Khan) and Ashima (Tabu) are a young couple who are brought together in an arranged marriage and soon leave Calcutta to seek their fortune in America. As the couple becomes accustomed to one another, they learn to deal with the coolness and superficiality of life in New York, even as they revel in the opportunities the city offers them. Before long, Ashima gives birth to a baby boy, and pressed to choose a name, they dub the infant Nikhil, though he soon picks up the nickname Gogol, after Ashoke's favorite author. By the time the child is old enough to attend school, he insists upon being called Gogol at all times, and he displays little interest in his Indian heritage. Several years on, Gogol has decided he wants to be called Nick (and is now played by Kal Penn) and has become a thoroughly Americanized teenager, openly rebelling against his parents, smoking marijuana in his room, and dating Maxine (Jacinda Barrett), a preppy blonde from a wealthy family. Ashoke and Ashima are uncertain about how to deal with their son's attempts to cut himself off from their culture, but Nick begins expressing some uncertainty himself when he meets Moushumi (Zuleikha Robinson), a beautiful girl who also comes from a family of Indian expatriates. The Namesake was adapted from the bestselling novel by Jhumpa Lahiri. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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dibotdibot WarGame Adventures of the Hamil ...
by dibot in dibot Blog
loved it.
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"I'm probably spoiled on Robin Hood movies, having seen too many darker versions to really appreciate the technicolor spectacle that is The Adventures of Robin Hood. Errol Flynn ("Cuban Rebel Girls") is very charismatic and the Merry Men have a joviality not even matched by the Disney version. The film has all the familiar legend highlights, including the archery contest, and everyone is into their parts. Maid Marian's handmaid brings in some excellent comic bits. But no one will every be as good as Alan Rickman in the Sheriff of Nottingham role. WarGames is a really fun thriller from the '80s with the lovable Matthew Broderick ("Bee Movie") and a surprisingly cute Ally Sheedy ("Steam"). Broderick is a computer geek who stumbles upon a military computer and gets it started playing a nuclear simulation "game." The computer is so huge it takes up a room, and Broderick has a telephone line especially for his modem. It's so cute. Anyway, despite the outdated technology, the story is ve ... " [More]
unclefesteringunclefestering Everyday since then has been a ...
by unclefestering in unclefestering Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"There is a great surprise in the heart of The Namesake: that Kal Penn can actually act as something other than a stoner. The movie becomes something a shambling bear by the end, but it has a poignancy that is a hallmark of the assured and gracious hand of director Mira Nair. The movie tells two interwoven stories: that of Ashima (played by Tabu) who follows her husband from warm and supportive India to the Cold and lonely New York City and that of her son, Gogol, who grows up between the world of possibilities that America offers and the world of tradition represented by India. They are both forced to learn how to find the world of support that is around them, but one they have never tapped into before, but their paths are going in different directions. Ashima has to learn the value of independence, while Gogol learns the value of family. One of the saving graces of this movie is the long silences when the characters don’t talk to each other but manage to say everything. From ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Great World of Sound Tops Gotha ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"IFP has just announced the nominations for their Gotham Awards, which will be handed out in Brooklyn next month. I’m so happy to see that Craig Zobel’s fantastic Great World of Sound has been nominated in three categories–Best Feature, Breakthrough Director and Breakthrough Actor–the most nominations of any single film this year. Zobel’s feature, which Magnolia released with little fanfare last month, shares the Best Feature category with four, relatively “big” indie-arm titles: The Namesake, I’m Not There, Margot at the Wedding, and Into the Wild. I’ve privately bitched about the lack of publicity surrounding Sound (even the release date seemed misguided, as it fell right in the middle of the Toronto Film Festival and thus necessarily turned coverage of the movie by bloggers and other indie journalists of limited resources into an afterthought), so I’m hoping these nominations will give Magnolia the impetus to give the film a stronger push. According to the distributor’s website ... " [More]
erico_77375erico_77375 A Movie That Asks What's In A N ...
by erico_77375 in erico_77375 Blog
liked it.
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"There is something powerful about a name that rubs off on that who is branded by it's moniker. For me, I was named after legendary guitarist Eric Clapton, something that I hold with some pride. Others aren't so luck (think about all those boys named Sue). The Namesake, based on a bestseller and directed by Mira Nair, explores how one man's name came to be and what he does with it.The movie is about the Gangulis, an Indian family in New York headed by Ashoke (Irfan Khan) and his wife Ashima (Tabu). They have two kids, Sonia (Sahira Nair) and Gogol (Kal Penn). The movie is a straight narrative that starts off with Ashoke's doomed train ride where he is given the idea to travel to New York from India, to his marriage to his wife. They eventually have thier kids, with Gogol being the oldest and most important to the movie. Gogol grows up caught between the world he has known in America and traditions of India. His first major conflict between these two worlds comes when ... " [More]
PaLPaL The Namesake Sparkles with Quiet
by PaL in PaL Blog
liked it.
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"(From my daily weblog, The Buddha Diaries) The Namesake is a good movie, well worth seeing. It’s the story of a Bengali couple, married by family arrangement, who move to the United States and bring up their own family, a son and a daughter, maintaining their own rich cultural traditions in the context of American society.It’s a film, as I saw it, in good part about civility. The relationship between man and wife starts out having nothing to do with romantic love, or the reasons for which we in the West choose to get married. It’s characterized by civility and restraint, by mutual tolerance—even of mistakes—and a respect of each others’ inner privacy. We watch it grow into a deep and abiding love—and one which allows for the growth of an intimacy eventually far richer than the intimacy of spilling every secret of the heart and soul or of leaping into bed at the first opportunity. Here in the West, we tend to blunder mindlessly across ... " [More]
jklugmanjklugman The Namesake (2006)
by jklugman in jklugman Blog
lost interest.
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"The Namesake is a family drama that follows a Bengali-American family (the Gangulis) from the parents' courtship in India, move to New York City, and birth and life of their son, Gogol (played by Kal Penn). The film explores the tensions between tradition and assimilation, and between autonomy and family life. Unfortunately I do not believe the film addresses these issues in a particularly interesting way, namely because of its focus on Gogol's coming of age and maturation. Gogol transforms from being obnoxious and self-absorbed to being a good guy who cares about his mama and his Bengali heritage. I didn't buy Kal Penn's performance, and I didn't buy how profound his character's self-realization was. I couldn't shake the feeling that I had seen this kind of story many, many times before. On the plus side, the actors who play the parents do a marvelous job (Irfan Khan as Ashoke, the father, and Tabu as Ashima, the mother). I think their charac ... " [More]
tadivtadiv A loving look at family conflict.
by tadiv in tadiv Blog
loved it.
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"Director Mira Nair delivers a very well-told story with characters that engage you as you soak in the beautiful imagery. The story starts with the father (Irfan Khan) as a young man in India and quickly finds him getting married and returning to the United States with his new bride played by Tabu. It then takes on following the life of their son, Gogol (Kal Penn in a stunning performance), and his struggle living in modern American culture while trying to live up to his parents' expectations that he hold onto his Indian heritage and traditions. While you may feel the story line is familiar, this film is anything but typical - it draws you in with the wonderful acting and grand cinematography. It will make you laugh, cry, and feel the bonds between the members of the Namesake's family. " [More]
wongawonga my 2006 movie list
by wonga in wonga's filmblog
loved it.
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"i saw 97 movies last year and it was hard to narrow them down but these are my favorites from 2006 for whatever reasons (i tried for 10 but just couldn't make it)! some are from 2005 and were seen later. i hope 2007 is half as good...TOP 15 LIST FOR 2006 MOVIES Sweet Land The Departed Paradise Now Three Burials Of Melquiades Estrada Neil Young: Heart Of Gold The Heart Of The Game Little Miss Sunshine Shopgirl Quinceanara Transamerica Shut Up And Sing The Prestige The Illusionist The History Boys Charlotte’s WebHONORABLE MENTIONBabel Casino Royale Cave Of The Yellow Dog Deja Vu Half Nelson Hollywoodland Kinky Boots Running With Scissors Stranger Than Fiction The Devil Wears Prada The Namesake The Notorious Bettie Page The Queen Who Loves The Sun Wordplay " [More]
wongawonga what i saw at Telluride this ye ...
by wonga in wonga's filmblog
loved it.
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"FRIDAY EVENING: SEVERANCE - don't like horror/slasher movies so this was not fun. i can appreciate that it was clever and funny (i was laughing when i wasn't cringing) but it was not for me. i'm sure it will be very popular! Laura Harris (Daisy from Dead Like Me) was fun to watch and made it tolerable. SATURDAY MORNING: A TRIBUTE TO WALTER MURCH - liked this a lot. only tribute we made it to. after some clips there was an on-stage interview and although technical it was really fascinating. highlights for me were when he talked about how he redid Touch of Evil using Orson Welles' notes and how he edited the Godfather movies. great storytelling and behind the scenes info. could have listened for another hour. SATURDAY AFTERNOON: THE SENTIMENTAL BLOKE - one of my absolute favorites. i love silent films and this rare one from Australia i'd never heard of. very charming, with live original music from an Australian composer. Telluride is known for it's "hidden tr ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Gifted Indian filmmaker Mira Nair shifts focus to a subject that should interest Americans of Indian descent -- and, in truth, any immigrant eager to maintain his or her ethnic roots. Nair's The Namesake follows an Indian national (Irfan Khan) and his arranged bride (Tabu) during their first fledgling months in snowy New York, eventually transitioning into the story of their adult son (Kal Penn) coming to grips with his unusual first name. However, this one-sentence synopsis hints at why The Namesake can't achieve greatness -- it can't decide on either a main character or a main story. Nair has plenty to say about the cultural identity issues that permeate the narrative, and her usual confident filming techniques bolster her observations. But the film feels too diffuse with its variety of agendas and perspectives. The central idea -- at least, the idea that spawned the title -- is that Penn's Gogol seeks to grow into harmony with being named after Russian author Nikolai Gogol, whose book his father was clutching when he survived a train wreck back in India. But this incident doesn't have the metaphorical punch it's supposed to have. One would think the book his father was reading was somewhat random, and even then, it was a Russian author, not an Indian one, so the relevance to his Indian heritage is absent. Essentially, Gogol's identity crisis is just one of a half-dozen short stories The Namesake wants to tackle. The result is an overlong running time and a sense of exhaustion by the finish. Despite this, there is much to recommend about The Namesake, particularly Penn's decision to go arthouse after such frat-house efforts as Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle and National Lampoon's Van Wilder: The Rise of Taj. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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