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A Passage to India
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Synopsis
A Passage to India, director David Lean's final film (for which he also received editing credit), breaks no new ground cinematically, but remains an exquisitely assembled harkback to such earlier Lean epics as Doctor Zhivago and Ryan's Daughter. Based on the novel by E. M. Forster, the film is set in colonial India in 1924. Adela Quested (Judy Davis), a sheltered, well-educated British woman, arrives in the town of Chandrapore, where she hopes to experience "the real India". Here she meets and befriends Dr. Aziz (Victor Banerjee), who, despite longstanding racial and social taboos, moves with relative ease and freedom amongst highborn British circles. Feeling comfortable with Adela, Aziz invites her to accompany him on a visit to the Marabar caves. Adela has previously exhibited bizarre, almost mystical behavior during other ventures into the Indian wilderness: this time, she emerges from the caves showing signs of injury and ill usage. To Aziz' horror, he is accused by Adela of raping her. Typically, the British ruling class rallies to Adela's defense, virtually convicting Aziz before the trial ever begins. Though he is eventually acquitted due to lack of evidence (in fact, director Lean never shows us what really happened), Aziz is ruined in the eyes of both the British and his own people-as is Adela. Woven into these proceedings is a subplot involving Adela's elderly travelling companion Mrs. Moore (Peggy Ashcroft), who through a series of plot twists too complex to describe here becomes a heroine of the Indian Independence movement. A Passage to India was nominated for several Academy Awards, scoring wins in the categories of Best Supporting Actress (Peggy Ashcroft) and Best Original Score (Maurice Jarre). A theatrical version of A Passage to India, written by Santha Rama Rau, was previously adapted for television by the BBC in the mid-1970s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Peggy Ashcroft Mrs. Moore
Victor Banerjee Dr. Aziz
Michael Culver McBryde
Judy Davis Adela Quested
Ann Firbank Mrs. Callendar
Alec Guinness Godbole
Nigel Havers Ronny Heaslop
Saeed Jaffrey Hamidullah
Art Malik Mahmoud Ali
Antonia Pemberton Mrs. Turton
Roshan Seth Amritrao
Clive Swift Maj. Callendar
James Fox Richard Fielding
Richard Wilson Turton
Sandra Hotz Stella

Production Crew

Herbert Westbrook Art Director
Les Tomkins Art Director
Ram Yedekar Art Director
E.M. Forster Book Author
Santha Rama Rau Book Author
Priscilla John Casting
Ernest Day Cinematographer
Maurice Jarre Composer (Music Score)
Judy Moorcraft Costume Designer
David Lean Director
David Lean Editor
Christopher Figg First Assistant Director
Nick Laws First Assistant Director
Eric Allwright Makeup
Jill Carpenter Makeup
Robin Clarke Music Editor
Santha Rama Rau Play Author
David Lean Producer
John Heyman Producer
Lord John Brabourne Producer
Richard Goodwin Producer
John Box Production Designer
David Lean Screenwriter
Robin Browne Second Unit Camera
Hugh Scaife Set Designer
Graham Hartstone Sound/Sound Designer
John W. Mitchell Sound/Sound Designer
Michael Carter Sound/Sound Designer
Nicolas Le Messurier Sound/Sound Designer
Robin Browne Special Effects
Year: 1984
Runtime: 163
Country: UK
MPAA Rating: PG
Category: Feature

Genre
Drama

Sound
Dolby

Produced by
Columbia Pictures
HBO

Awards
1984 - Best Film - New York Film Critics Circle
1984 - Best Foreign Film - Golden Globe
1984 - Best Picture - Academy
1984 - Best Picture - National Board of Review
1984 - Best Picture - New York Film Critics Circle
1984 - Best Picture - Academy
1984 - Best Picture - Academy
1984 - Best Foreign Film - Golden Globe
1984 - Best Picture - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie
1984 - Best Picture - National Board of Review
1984 - Best Picture - New York Film Critics Circle
1984 - Best Picture - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Scie
1984 - Best Foreign Film - Hollywood Foreign Press Association
1985 - Best Film - British Academy Awards
1985 - Best Picture - British Academy of Film and Television