West Is West **
Dir. Andy De Emmony. 103 mins. Empire Theatres. June 23.
Movie Review
From Time Out London
It’s hard to get excited about this late sequel
to the 1999 box office smash ‘East Is East’. The 12-year gap suggests
it’s no simple cash-in and yet there’s little feeling it’s a story
demanding to be heard.
We’re back in 1970s Salford where Om Puri
stars as Pakistani patriarch George, who again precedes every noun with
‘bloody’ in order to instil national pride in the minds of his wayward
brood. Young Sajid (debutant Aqib Khan) – sadly shorn of his trademark,
over-sized parka – is having a tough time caring about his heritage. And
so we’re packed off to an unfeasibly lush Pakistan for the rest of the
film, where Sajid is grudgingly submerged in family history and George
must face past demons which explain why he decamped to Salford and
married a white woman (Linda Bassett, sadly underused).
With
no culture-clash cliché left unplundered, Andy DeEmmony sets his camera
to autopilot for a film which never decides who or what it’s about.
There’s some formulaic fun in the script, mostly in Sajid’s curt, sweary
reaction to local custom, but the film doesn’t come together, partly
because it veers back and forth between broad comedy and high melodrama,
but mainly because we never feel an iota of empathy for either George
or his child-rearing issues.
Author: David Jenkins
Time Out London Issue 2114: Feb 23-March 2, 2011