Midnight's
Children
Deepa
Mehta's Midnight's Children is not a well-crafted film of
Salman Rushdie's Booker Prize-winning novel of the same name. Yet it
captures the essence of the novel to the core. the children born at
the stroke of midnight of Aug 15, 1947, especially, Saleem, Shiva and
Parvati, it is a multi-layered tale of destinies. It is a story of
the rich, the poor and the misguided. It is fiction and fantasy
delightfully wrapped within the folds of the political scenario of
the three countries, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. The
birth of Saleem is a complex tale that is narrated in the first 45
minutes of the film. Inspired by her rebel husband's communist
slogan, "Let the rich be poor and the poor, rich", the
misguided paediatric nurse, Mary, deliberately switches the identity
tags of the two babies as a gesture of solidarity and thereby swaps
their destinies.
Magic
Realism is also plays vital role in making movie believable. If this
technique want used then perhaps we Won’t believe in the story.
Through magic realism all children brought together in the movie, and
it gives novelty to the movie and makes it more interesting.
Movie is also political allegory, presenting dark side of partition, then the war with Pakistan and Emergency. So it looks like Rashdie as a outsider criticizing india. The scene of india in the movie is of slum, poverty which looks defaming india. It looks towards india like western people does.
Movie is also political allegory, presenting dark side of partition, then the war with Pakistan and Emergency. So it looks like Rashdie as a outsider criticizing india. The scene of india in the movie is of slum, poverty which looks defaming india. It looks towards india like western people does.
The
Reluctant Fundamentalist
The
Reluctant Fundamentalist is novel by Pakistan born writer
Mohsin Hamid. This movie is also based on this novel. The
Reluctant Fundamentalist movie is brightly directed by Meera Nair
Dir.
This
beautiful movie is about how the new era of fear is dividing East and
West, featuring UK-based writer Mohsim Hamid's critically acclaimed
book, The Reluctant Fundamentalist, about the impact of Sept 11th on
Muslims living abroad post 9/11 attacks and its psychological and
political damage. It's a tale of mixed loyalties and one man's
journey into the heart of the conflict.
This
is a story about two extremes. On the one hand is the religious
fundamentalism which drives people to kill for the sake of dogma and
blind obedience to a book whilst on the other hand lies the financial
fundamentalism which drives people to gamble the livelihoods of
others for the sake of individual profit maximisation and wealth
accumulation.
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