West Is West (2010 film)

West Is West!

Canadian release poster
Directed by Andy DeEmmony
Produced by Leslee Udwin
Written by Ayub Khan-Din
Starring Om Puri
Linda Bassett
Robert Pugh
Aqib Khan
Music by Rob Lane
Shankar Ehsaan Loy
Cinematography Peter Robertson
Edited by Jon Gregory
Stephen O'Connell
Production
company
BBC Films
Assassin Films
Release date
  • 12 September 2010 (2010-09-12) (TIFF)
  • 25 February 2011 (2011-02-25) (United Kingdom)
Running time
103 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget £2.5 million[1]
Box office £4.9 million[2]

West Is West is a 2010 British comedy-drama film, which is a sequel to the 1999 comedy East Is East. It stars Om Puri, Linda Bassett, Aqib Khan, Ila Arun and Jimi Mistry, is written by Ayub Khan-Din, directed by Andy DeEmmony, and produced by Leslee Udwin for Assassin Films and BBC Films.

The film was first shown on 12 September 2010 at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival. It premiered at the BFI London Film Festival on 19 October 2010, followed by UK and Irish release on 25 February 2011. The first US showing was on 2 November 2010 at the South Asian International Film Festival, followed by several other US festivals. While it was released in Canada on 25 March 2011, it never received a US release.

Plot

The film is set in the year 1976, five years after the original film East Is East. Little is known about most of the Khan children, except that they seldom communicate with their parents. Tariq is now a hippie (looking like George Harrison) who runs a new age shop with older brother Nazir and has an English girlfriend who is unaware of his true ethnicity, and Maneer is living with his extended family in Pakistan where he is searching for a suitable wife. Sajid, the youngest, who no longer wears a parka, is a truant who is constantly bullied due to his Pakistani background, although the headmaster—a former British soldier who had served in the Punjab—is sympathetic and encourages him to embrace his heritage. After Sajid is caught shoplifting, his father George, who has somewhat retained his bullying nature, attacks him at home. When Sajid retaliates by calling him a "dirty Paki bastard", a devastated George states all of his other children in England have become British and he cannot lose Sajid as well, so he decides to take him to Pakistan to meet his extended family and show him that life there is better, though Ella openly disapproves.

On arriving in Pakistan, George and Sajid are greeted by a few of George's relatives including Tavnir, a lazy man who often tries to swindle George—and is his son-in-law through his marriage to one of George's daughters with his first wife Basheera. On the family farm, George is reunited with Basheera and their daughters, whom he had abandoned thirty years before, and hands out gifts to all, then tells them that he has come for a month to find Maneer a wife, but he soon discovers that no family will offer their daughter in marriage as they fear that Maneer will leave his wife for an English woman as his father George did when he left Basheera for Ella. Furious, George blames his family in England, but Maneer reminds him that he himself is at fault, and Basheera is also angry with George for abandoning her when she needed him.

When Tavnir explains to Sajid that he will not tolerate any trouble, he is abruptly told to "fuck off". Sajid is taken to the local school for enrolment, where he meets spiritual teacher Pir Naseem and local boy Zaid who Sajid loathes at first and refuses to enrol. Zaid, who can speak basic English as he is being taught by Pir Naseem, advises him, and the two soon become friends. Zaid teaches him Pakistani ways and Pir Naseem promises George that he will discipline his son when he misbehaves. Sajid gradually appreciates his culture and new surroundings which pleases George, except that he is slightly jealous of the bond that develops between his son and Pir Naseem. Eventually Sajid meets Rochdale-born Pakistani woman Neelam, who bears a striking resemblance to Maneer's favourite singer Nana Mouskouri; like Maneer she is also looking for a spouse, and with her approval Sajid plans a meeting between the pair.

Meanwhile, Ella, who soon discovers that George has withdrawn the family savings to build a house for his family in Pakistan, travels to Pakistan with her best friend Annie in tow, and is furious when she finds that her husband is building a house for his family. She also plans to take Sajid back to England with her, and is shocked when her son refuses to leave. During her stay there, Ella fights with Basheera and her daughters, and refuses to give them access to the new house, but upon realising how alike they are the two put their differences aside and become friends. Maneer and Neelam soon marry, and George for the first time in years begins to appreciate Ella as a wife who stood by him during hard times. The film ends with George and his England-based family returning home and Sajid finally proud of his Asian background, whilst George's chippy now serves Pakistani-style kebabs.

Cast

Om Puri, Linda Bassett, Lesley Nicol, Jimi Mistry, and Emil Marwa are the only actors from the original movie who reprise their roles in West is West. Zita Sattar who plays Neelam was Meena, George and Ella's only daughter, in the original stage production of East Is East.[3]

Soundtrack

West is West
Soundtrack album by Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy
Released 18 February 2011 (2011-02-18)
Genre Feature film soundtrack
Label Decca Records
Producer Universal Music Group
Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy chronology
Patiala House
(2011)Patiala House2011
West is West
(2011)
Game
(2011)Game2011

Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy composed the score.[4] Rob Lane arranged it.[5] The songs were recorded in Purple Rain studio, in Mumbai. Rob Lane joined Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy to compose music for the film. They used several Indian classical instruments like Jaltarang, Santoor, Flute and Sarangi. The renowned Jaltarang player Milind Tulnkar was roped in to play the instrument for ten to twelve sequences.[6]

Tracks
No.TitleMusicArtist(s)Length
1."Alright Alright Alright"Jacques Dutronc Jacques Lanzmann Joe StrangeMungo Jerry2:47
2."O Meri Maina"Shankar-JaikishanManna Dey, Usha Mangeshkar4:03
3."Arriving in Pakistan"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 2:08
4."George Ploughs The Field"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 1:58
5."Over And Over"Nana MouskouriNana Mouskouri2:58
6."Piya Tu Ab To Aaja"R.D. BurmanAsha Bhosle5:21
7."Checking Out The Girls"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 2:00
8."Kaala Doria"Shankar–Ehsaan–LoySanjeev Kumar, Shankar Mahadevan2:21
9."Mere Sayaan"Shankar–Ehsaan–LoyShankar Mahadevan2:17
10."Toomba"Sain Zahoor (Coke Studio)Sain Zahoor2:15
11."Rooftop Chase"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 2:21
12."Basheera's Pain"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 3:38
13."Main Ho Gaee Dildar Ki"Kamal AhmadNahid Akhtar5:06
14."Mellow Yellow"DonovanDonovan3:38
15."Numaishaan Mohobbatan Di"Shankar–Ehsaan–LoySain Zahoor1:06
16."Waterfight"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 3:07
17."The Final Farewell"Shankar–Ehsaan–Loy, Rob Lane 3:25
18."Aik Alif"Sain Zahoor (Coke Studio)Noori3:07

Critical reception

The film received mixed reviews, scoring 68% on Rotten Tomatoes with 15 fresh and seven rotten reviews.[7] Several reviewers noted that while the film still had the sense of humour of East Is East, it did not reach the level attained in the original. In his review for the Globe and Mail, Rick Groen noted the "sudden leaps into unabashed melodrama", saying that "When they fail, the hurlyburly gets annoying. But when they succeed, the result can be genuinely touching."[8]

Sukhdev Sandhu of The Daily Telegraph in his review described the soundtrack as "delightful".[9] Rediff reviewer Shaikh Ayaz, in his review, stated "The music is beautifully cherry-picked, mixing Sufi tunes with Punjabi folk music."[10] Nikhat Kazmi of Times of India, in her review, said that the "soulful music" of the movie was memorable.[11] Pankaj Sabnani of Glamsham also gave the music a thumbs up, saying "Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy's music is excellent and gels well with the film."[12] Daily Bhaskar review described the music as "soothing" and "situational".[13]

References

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