My Beautiful Laundrette

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My Beautiful Laundrette
Directed by Stephen Frears
Produced by Tim Bevan,
Sarah Radclyffe
Written by Hanif Kureishi
Starring Daniel Day-Lewis,
Gordon Warnecke,
Saeed Jaffrey,
Roshan Seth
Distributed by Mainline Pictures
Release date(s) November 16, 1985
Running time 97 min.
Language English
Budget $400,000 (estimated)
IMDb profile

My Beautiful Laundrette is a 1985 film directed by Stephen Frears. The screenplay was written by Hanif Kureishi.

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[edit] Production Highlights

My Beautiful Laundrette was Frears's fifth feature film. Originally shot for television, it was later released in theatres and eventually became his first international success. The movie features an early performance by Academy Award winner Daniel Day-Lewis in the role of Johnny. The cast also includes Saeed Jaffrey, Roshan Seth, Gordon Warnecke, Derrick Branche and Rita Wolf.

The film benefits from a widely praised original screenplay by Hanif Kureishi, which depicts London life in the Thatcher Era through the complex - and often comical - relationships between members of the Asian community. The plot tackles many polemic issues, such as homosexuality, racism and England's economic and political policy during the 1980s.

The soundtrack was written by Stanley Myers and Hans Zimmer. Non-original music included the waltz Les Pâtineurs, by French composer Emile Waldteufel, and excerpts from Puccini's Madama Butterfly.

My Beautiful Laundrette marked the first time Oliver Stapleton was in charge of the cinematography in a Stephen Frears' movie. He would later grow to be one of the director's most stable collaborators.

The title features a fairly common variant spelling of the word launderette.

[edit] Awards

My Beautiful Laundrette was nominated in 1987 for a single Academy Award - Best Original Screenplay, by Hanif Kureishi. It lost to Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters. Kureishi received a few more international nominations, most notably for the BAFTA, and was awarded by the American National Society of Film Critics.

[edit] Plot

Omar (Gordon Warnecke) is the son of a Pakistani journalist who lives in London but hates England and its international politics. By contrast, Omar's paternal uncle Nasser is a successful entrepreneur and an active member of the London Asian community. Omar's father asks his uncle to give him a job and, after working for a brief time as a car washer in one of his uncle's garages, he is assigned the task of running a run-down laundrette and turning it into a profitable business.

Omar's car is attacked by a group of right-wing extremists shouting racist slogans: amongst them he recognizes an old friend of his, Johnny (Daniel Day Lewis). Johnny agrees to help Omar, and they resume a love affair which (it is implied) had been interrupted after school.

At Nasser's, Omar meets a few other members of the Pakistani community: Tania, Nasser's daughter and possibly a future bride; and Salim, who traffics drugs and hires him to deliver them from the airport. Running out of money, Omar and Johnny sell off one of Salim's deliveries to make cash for the laundrette redecoration.

The laundrette becomes a success. At the opening day, Nasser visits the store with his mistress, Rachel. She later falls ill with a skin rash apparently caused by a potion made by his wife, and decides to leave him. Tania drops by and asks Johnny to go away with her; he refuses, and she departs alone. Nasser sees Tania at a train platform whilst she is running away. Johnny's former friends also appear and engage him in a fight. He is saved by Omar, who then helps him clean up as the film draws to an end.

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