What Is In A Name?
Last night I went out and saw "The Namesake". And as it has been reported before, for once the movie trumps the book on which it is based. Few other things I liked about this Mira Nair's movie include the way time in the movie movies both backwards and forwards across two continents, the cinemaphotography which captures the slovenly loveliness of two cities Irrfan Khan & Tabu's restrained and brilliant performances as Ashoke and Ashima, and the delicious background score by one of my favorite musicians, Nitin Sawhney, which includes one of his most brilliant songs "Falling". Finally, as the end credits - a brilliant touch that; Bengali written out in calligraphy - overlaid with Susheela Rahman's "The Same Song" roll, I think one walks out of this movie - especially if one is an exile, voluntary or not - with this knowledge that it is love (Ashoke and Ashima's no-hand holding-in-public love, Gogol's love for himself etc), and the shade that it casts are somewhat sufficient refuges to face off this certain loneliness that comes with geographical displacements.
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The film didn't grab me much, standard Hollywood fable script, really - return to your humble origins and find salvation. The tune I liked best was the "classical" Bengali (?) tune played at the beginning and the end: 02 - The Namesake - Opening Titles (Nitin Sawhney) From the OST.
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Steff, don't discount the power
of man's nostalgia to overlook the inherent limitation of any movie. So even if the plot was weak, other virtues made up for it. And yes, that is a classical Hindustani raga, whose name I can't recall this minute.
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