English Vinglish FIRST Review

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Posted: 12 years ago
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http://www.filmicafe.co/movies/2118/English_Vinglish/review

English Vinglish is the simple story of an ordinary housewife facing a relatable challenge, that of mastering command over the 'very funny' English language and gaining some respect from her family too in the bargain.

Presenting this predictable predicament as a premise with nuanced sensitivity and considerate understanding is where the film triumphs and so too does first time director, Gauri Shinde. Gauri conquers this apparent predictability in subject matter by being simplistically relatable rather than overly dramatic - giving a fair, balanced and humanistic view absent of a pro or con taint. She balances the good with the bad and the bad with the good without it coming off as moralistic or preachy.

Gauri is able to earnestly bring forth an insider's perspective on the subject of a layman (on this occasion laywomen's) common insecurity versus the English language, bringing along with it a close proximity for the audience to the protagonist of the film Shashi, played by Sridevi.

Tugging at heart strings and hitting the right emotional notes, the true to life writing and taut editing adds authenticity to the storytelling of the lead character's journey from the homeland to a foreign land and how the film progressively unfolds. Certain scenes and instances in the film seem like pages right out of day to day real life and are sure to resonate with audiences - bringing a smile at times and a tear at other times.

Where the film flatters to some extent is that at times it falls prey to the very same stereotypes which it, itself is trying to defy by being insensitive to the feelings of those being stereotyped even if inadvertently.

Amit Trivedi's situational music is another trump card for English Vinglish. His charming musical score is the perfect soundtrack for Shashi's story as it alleviates the narrative to a whole another level and lingers with the viewer much after the film ends. The slow numbers Gustakh Dil, Dhak Dhuk and Marathi wedding song Navrai Majhi are the pick of the lot. Swanand Kirkire's quirky sounding lyrics lend a distinct language to Shashi's fluctuating predicament and aren't of the regular lyrical variety which gives them an added zest.

The able supporting actors in English Vinglish enact their respective parts effortlessly. They provide ample support by adding a genuineness to the proceedings with their spot-on performances. Starting with Adil Hussain (Agent Vinod, Reluctant Fundamentalist, Life of Pi) as Shashi's husband, Priya Anand as Shashi's niece, Mehdi Nebbou as Shashi's smitten French classmate, Cory Hibbs as Shashi's English teacher and Shivansh Kotia as Shashi's son - who particularly standout.

Special mention to Amitabh Bachchan's special appearance in the film, which isn't just for effect as they tend to be but is rather required in the larger scheme of things.

Decade and a half absence, comeback film, deglam avatar - all of this is already known about Sridevi returning as Shashi in English Vinglish. The surprise element if there can be any about her performance in the film is even as a housewife she has the same spark, spunk and spritely quality which she did when impersonating Charlie Chaplin in Mr. India twenty five years ago, marquee expressions and all. She doesn't enact the part but becomes it, winning the audience new and old all over again.

English Vinglish is a heartwarming, feel good movie about triumphing insecurity and overcoming complexities, be it inferiority or superiority. It leaves you with sweet after taste, just like a ladoo to be savoured and enjoyed with every bite. So bite into English Vinglish, it is just delicious!

4**** stars
By Guneet Wadera

Edited by desihamesha - 12 years ago

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Posted: 12 years ago
#2
Variety review
Toronto

English Vinglish

(India)

An Eros Intl. presentation in association with R. Balki of a Hope Prods. production in association with Curbside Films. Produced by Sunil Lulla, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, R.K. Damani, Balki. Executive producer, Anita Anand Zutshi. Co-producer, Ilana Rossein. Directed, written by Gauri Shinde.
With: Sridevi, Adil Hussain, Mehdi Nebbou, Priya Anand, Sulabha Deshpande, Sujata Kumar, Navika Kotia, Shivansh Kotia, Rajeev Ravindranathan, Cory Hibbs, Amitabh Bachchan. (Hindi, English dialogue)
Popular Indian thesp Sridevi returns to the screen after a 15-year hiatus with "English Vinglish," a sprightly star vehicle that finds her perfectly cast as an attractive yet old-fashioned homebody who elevates her sense of worth by becoming bilingual. Set for an Oct. 5 international launch, the pic could reach beyond the usual aud for Bollywood fare, especially in sophisticated North American markets, with a promotional campaign aimed at over-30 femme viewers receptive to writer-director Gauri Shinde's seriocomic theme of self-empowerment.
Disarmingly charming in a manner that recalls Audrey Hepburn, Sridevi plays Shashi, a thirtysomething Pune wife and mom whose culinary expertise and other homemaking skills are routinely taken for granted by her husband and two children. Worse, her spouse and kids repeatedly tease her about her inability (or unwillingness) to master English, which they see as yet another sign of her tradition-bound mindset.
But Shashi herself doesn't seem unbearably frustrated by her lack of bilingual ability until she travels from Pune to New York -- her first international trip on her own -- to help with preparations for her very Americanized niece's wedding. When she finds it difficult to simply order water in a Manhattan sandwich shop, she impulsively enrolls at a language school that offers accelerated English lessons for students of any nationality.
Pic occasionally resembles a broadly played U.S. sitcom, as Shashi amusingly interacts with a multiethnic cross-section of fellow students, including a French chef (Mehdi Nebbou) who's instantly attracted to her, and their flamboyantly gay teacher (Cory Hibbs, who nimbly prevents the character from devolving into an offensive caricature). Indeed, if this were an American-produced film, it would be easy to imagine a weekly TV series spinoff.
Far more often, though, "English Vinglish" is traditional Bollywood escapism, a lightly enjoyable trifle featuring exuberant musical interludes, an extremely chaste approach to conjugal relations and extramarital temptation, and a crowdpleasing wrap-up that allows the lead character to be all she can be while still respecting family values.
The Hindi-language version features a lightly comical cameo by Bollywood icon Amitabh Bachchan as Shashi's fellow passenger aboard a New York-bound airliner, who inadvertently unsettles others on the plane while explained in the in-flight movie to her. Ajith Kumar reportedly plays the part in the pic's Tamil-language version.
Lenser Laxman Utekar does a fine job of enabling the audience to view Manhattan, where most of the pic was shot, entirely from Shashi's p.o.v. It appears exotic and inviting all at once, and seems an altogether terrific place to jumpstart one's self-esteem.
Camera (color), Laxman Utekar; editor, Hemanti Sarkar; music, Amit Trivedi; lyrics, Swanand Kirkire; production designer, Mustafa Stationwala; sound, Resul Pookutty; visual effects supervisor, Reupal Rawal; assistant director, Jagan Damodaran. Reviewed at Toronto Film Festival (Gala Presentations), Sept. 11, 2012. Running time: 133 MIN.
Edited by you2 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#3

Saturday, September 15, 2012

English Vinglish Review

Lately I've been wondering if Bollywood is losing its appeal for me, I've been getting into other things, haven't loved too many flicks, and even when watching Indian films I was mostly interested in the artsy stuff than the big films. For a while I thought it was Bollywood going through a slump. Then I thought maybe it's me, maybe this hobby had just run its course. But English Vinglish, the story of a woman whose confidence suffers because she can't speak English like the rest of her family can, reminded me why I fell in love with Bollywood back in the day. It reminded me of the feeling of watching a movie and not caring if it's simple or complex, or if it has a certain star, or if it's perfectly edited, or even if I agree with the philosophy of it. It reminded me of those times when I used to watch Bollywood movies just for the magic of seeing a different world materialize in front of my eyes.


Strange how that is because English Vinglish is not a particularly novel story, nor does it have the kind of strong heroine that I usually like to see. In fact I was heard to whisper-scream at poor Shashi (Sridevi's character): "Get a sense of humour already!!". But something about the way the story unfolded made me happy to just be in this movie. Maybe it was the ladoos that made everything sweeter because man oh man are they everywhere in this film! The trailer alone mentions them about 50 times! (And thank God the lovely people at TIFF gave us some after because otherwise I'd probably be in Little India right now, at 3 am, looking for them.)



Having never seen a full Sridevi movie before I didn't really know what to expect from her. But the moment she did a series of Michael Jackson moves in the beginning of the movie she had me eating out of her hand. And even though her wimpy character infuriated me in the beginning I was still happy to cheer for her to become a stronger woman as the movie progressed. Being a big believer in the idea that respect is earned, not implied, I did have a bone to pick with Shashi in the first half of the movie which plays like a less dramatic version of the Seeta story in Seeta aur Geeta. The type of story that irritates me by default. But unlike with Seeta and Geeta I can sincerely appreciate a character who finds the strength to change their condition within themselves, without waiting for a Geeta to come flying down from heaven, so when Shashi decided to go take English lessons and picked up the phone, I was fully on board with this character.

Also, how badass is Shashi's sister? She only had one important line in the whole movie but how fabulous was it that at the core of the story it's not some teenage crush that motivates Shashi to change, but the respect she has for her sister! I, for one, really appreciated this detail, fleeting as it was. Yay for sister power!

Apart from Sridevi, who was simply lovely, Adil Hussain also puts in a wonderful performance as the distant husband. I must commend him for the way he played Satish because it would have been very easy for that character to come across as the villain, but he retains enough warmth in his interactions with Shashi that I kept finding excuses for his behaviour even when, maybe, he didn't deserve it. And I know most people will disagree with this because I've seen this character get labelled as a class A jerk more than once so far. I may be a jerk myself but I found some of his jokes quite funny and harmless, certainly not as offensive as they were made out to be by Shashi's dramatic reactions. Really girl, if you're offended, speak up, slap him, do something about it, don't just sit there and suffer in silence. But I've already addressed this earlier so I won't bore you again with it.


English Vinglish, by the way, is one of those rare Hindi films where you end up caring about all those secondary characters too because they feel like real people. I've seen those people in my own Business English classes, so it was nice to meet them again in a movie. Ironically enough (and a first for me), the non-desi characters felt more fleshed out than some of the desi ones. At least in the English class. And I don't just mean Mehdi Nebbou, who got a heart flutter even out of me when he started speaking in French in one of the scenes towards the end (you'll *know* which one it is but hint: it's over the phone, and yes, it's so much dreamier if you understand French). Hell, you could have swept me onto a dustpan and carried me out of the theatre after that scene, that's how perfect he was. And I don't even like that language. Though, to be fair he did get some glorious lines throughout, and his oh-so-snob attitude towards fries had me smiling from ear to ear, which let's think about it for a second: how often is a non-desi character so well written in a Hindi film that you like them right away? Sadly, not often at all. (Oh but yes, it helps that he's so handsome too.)


Speaking of non-desi characters, I was ready to cringe about the gay English teacher. I mean I was ready to just close my eyes and go lalalalala every time he spoke to avoid throwing shoes at the screen because, well, Indian movies are not exactly known for sensitive portrayals of such minorities. And again, what a surprise. Yes, he was over the top at times (as are, in fact, most of my real life gay friends), but for the most part Cory Hibbs hit all the right notes! Not only did he stay away from those done-to-death mannerisms such as the limp hand, the lisp and addressing everyone with "honey", but the film treats him as normal person, not as a curiosity or as an alien (ok, his clothes were kind of crazy but hey I know straight men who dress worse than that!). And I know the entire audience was with me on this one because there was unanimous clapping when the point was made in one of the scenes in the film. I love Toronto!

Of course Sridevi got the biggest cheers throughout the film, it goes without saying, and well deserved, but from me the biggest cheer goes to the writer-director, Gauri Shinde, who manages to create a story that, as the kids say these days, keeps it real from beginning to end. So real in fact that I was reminded of my first trip to North America and how daunting and complicated everything seemed: from the push-bars on the buses to the streets in downtown (and Toronto is also a grid-city, just like New York, you'd think it's the easiest thing in the world), to the drinks menus in restaurants and the neverending streets in the suburbias. All these little details, all these little fears, all these little victories, Gauri Shinde captures them in the movie and plays them for laughs without shoving them in your face.

And we did laugh a lot throughout the movie. And we smiled a lot. We even clapped a few times. Because there are goofy scenes, yes, but then there are also moments that are funny in a quiet, homely kind of way. My favourite bits were Meera (the bride to be) translating some random ridiculousness to her American husband-to-be when he couldn't understand Hindi. Their relationship wasn't talked about much, but these little moments made them look like a real couple who teases each other and pokes each other. Of course, pyaar se. By the way, not sure if the role reversal was intentional but I like to think this is what Shashi and her husband would have been like at the beginning of their marriage. So just keep that in mind when you're laughing at Meera making fun of her fiance's difficulties with Hindi: if Satish is a jerk, then she is one too. Perspective is everything, no?

English Vinglish is not a story with fireworks and emotional outbursts. It doesn't need to be. It's just a simple little story about how people, words and events can change your attitude towards life in the blink of an eye. And about finding the right balance. It's the kind of movie that I know I could find flaws in (and I probably will on subsequent viewings) but its message is so endearing and so in line with my own life philosophy that I'd rather sit and munch on my ladoo with a smile on my face than nit-pick at it. While I do that, you go watch, I dare you to be a curmudgeon when you come out of it! And if you are, just watch the fabulous songs again!



PS: One more picture of Mehdi Nebbou at the premiere (courtesy of Filmicafe) because I could never resist a man dressed in black.
Posted byDolce and Namakat8:48 AM
Labels:Amit Tridevi,Bollywood,English Vinglish,Gauri Shinde,Mehdi Nebbou,R Balki,Sridevi,TIFF 2012
desihamesha thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
#4
English Vinglish is getting great reviews everywhere! Seems like a good movie.

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