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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 12:32 am 
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http://www.suntimes.com/output/ebert1/c ... nd12f.html

BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM / *** 1/2 (PG-13)

March 12, 2003

Jesminder: Parminder K. Nagra
Juliette: Keira Knightley
Joe: Jonathan Rhys-Meyers
Mr. Bhamra: Anupam Kher
Mrs. Bhamra: Shaheen Khan
Pinky: Archie Panjabi
Mel: Shaznay Lewis
Alan: Frank Harper
Paula: Juliet Stevenson

Fox Searchlight presents a film directed by Gurinder Chadha. Written by Chadha, Paul Mayeda Berges and Guljit Bindra. Running time: 112 minutes. Rated PG-13 (for language and sexual content).

BY ROGER EBERT

I saw more important films at Sundance 2003, but none more purely enjoyable than "Bend It Like Beckham," which is just about perfect as a teenage coming-of-age comedy. It stars a young actress of luminous appeal, it involves sports, romance and of course her older sister's wedding, and it has two misinformed soccer moms--one who doesn't know a thing about the game and another who doesn't even know her daughter plays it.

The movie, set in London, tells the story of Jesminder Bjamra, known as "Jess," who comes from a traditional Indian family. Her parents are Sikhs who fled from Uganda to England, where her dad works at Heathrow airport. They live in the middle-class suburb of Hounslow, under the flight path of arriving jets, where her mother believes that Jess has two great duties in life: to learn to prepare a complete Indian meal, and to marry a nice Indian boy, in exactly that order.

Jess plays soccer with boys in the park. In her family's living room is a large portrait of a Sikh spiritual leader, but above Jess's bed is her own inspiration--the British soccer superstar David Beckham, better known to some as Posh Spice's husband. To Beckham's portrait she confides her innermost dream, which is to play for England. Of course a girl cannot hope to be a soccer star, and an Indian girl should not play soccer at all, since in her mother's mind the game consists of "displaying your bare legs to complete strangers."

Jess is seen in the park one day by Juliette (Keira Knightley), who plays for the Hounslow Harriers, a woman's team, and is recruited to join them. The coach is a young Irishman named Joe (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers), and it is love at second or third sight--complicated, because Joe cannot date his players, and Juliette has a crush on him, too.

But all of these elements make the film sound routine, and what makes it special is the bubbling energy of the cast and the warm joy with which Gurinder Chadha, the director and co-writer, tells her story. I am the first to admit that Gurinder Chadha is not a name on everybody's lips, but this is her third film and I can promise you she has an unfailing instinct for human comedy that makes you feel good and laugh out loud.

Her previous film was the wonderful "What's Cooking," about four American ethnic families (African American, Latino, Jewish and Vietnamese) all preparing a traditional Thanksgiving dinner, while their younger generations are connected in unsuspected ways. There is an emerging genre of comedies about second- and third-generation young people breaking loose from traditional parents ("My Big Fat Greek Wedding" is the most spectacular example), and I've seen these rite-of-entry comedies by directors with Filipino, Indian, Chinese, Mexican, Iranian and Korean backgrounds, and even one, "Mississippi Masala," where Denzel Washington and Sarita Choudhury played two such characters whose stories meet.

"Bend It Like Beckham," which adds a British flavor to its London Metroland masala, is good not because it is blindingly original but because it is flawless in executing what is, after all, a dependable formula. The parents must be strict and traditional, but also loving and funny, and Mr. and Mrs. Bhamra (Anupam Kher and Shaheen Khan) are classic examples of the type. So is Juliette's mother, Paula (the wry, funny British star Juliet Stevenson), who tries to talk her tomboy daughter into Wonderbras, and spends most of the movie fearing that a girl who doesn't want to wear one must be a lesbian. ("There's a reason why Sporty Spice is the only one without a boyfriend.") The editing by Justin Krish gets laughs all on its own with the precision that it uses to cut to reaction shots as the parents absorb one surprise after another.

Jess, played by Parminder K. Nagra, is a physically exuberant girl whose love of soccer crosses over into a love of life. She runs onto the field as if simply at play, she does cartwheels after scoring goals, and although she deceives her parents about her soccer dreams, she loves them and understands their point of view. Her father, who played cricket in Uganda but was discriminated against by the local London club, still bears deep wounds, but "things are different now," Jess tells him, and there is the obligatory scene where he sneaks into the crowd at a match to see for himself.

Can there be an Indian comedy without a wedding? "Monsoon Wedding" is the great example, and here, too, we get the loving preparation of food, the exuberant explosion of music, and the backstage drama. All ethnic comedies feature scenes that make you want to leave the theater and immediately start eating, and "Bend It Like Beckham" may inspire some of its fans to make Indian friends simply so they can be invited over for dinner.

The movie's values run deep. It understands that for Jess' generation soccer is not about displaying bare legs (Jess has another reason to be shy about that), but it also understands the hopes and ambitions of parents--and, crucially, so does Jess, who handles the tentative romance with her coach in a way that combines tenderness with common sense. A closing scene at the airport, which in a lesser movie would have simply hammered out a happy ending, shows her tact and love.

Like all good movies, "Bend It Like Beckham" crosses over to wide audiences. It's being promoted in the magazines and on the cable channels that teenage girls follow, but recently we showed it on our Ebert & Roeper Film Festival at Sea, to an audience that ranged in age from 7 to 81, with a 50ish median, and it was a huge success. For that matter, the hip Sundance audience, dressed in black and clutching cell phones and cappuccinos, loved it, too. And why not, since its characters and sensibility are so abundantly lovable.


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 3:25 am 
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3.5 stars ain't bad...maybe i'll catch it in theaters and see how much it differed from the pirate.


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 3:35 am 
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theon wrote:
3.5 stars ain't bad...maybe i'll catch it in theaters and see how much it differed from the pirate.

don't waste your buck, unless you like girly/teen movies!

d/l an xvid copy. not even worth renting.

rather check Bend It Like Ladies:
http://idlebrain.com/research/anal/benditlike.html


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 6:14 am 
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While I admire Roger Ebert the film critic. But here I think he's rated the film too high. IMO, Bend It Like Backham was a mediocre film at best, what bothered me the most about the film was it's self-indecisive script/narration and direction.

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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 7:13 am 
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DVD Collector wrote:
While I admire Roger Ebert the film critic. But here I think he's rated the film too high. IMO, Bend It Like Backham was a mediocre film at best, what bothered me the most about the film was it's self-indecisive script/narration and direction.

I thought it was a good enough film. Not necessarily 3.5 stars good, though. What about the film was indecisive for you?


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 1:36 pm 
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Quote:
it's self-indecisive script/narration and direction.



Miss Malaprop are you coining your own words now "self-indecisive" :D


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 4:20 pm 
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I think, this review, reviews of Leela/BH /MW /Guru/BILB etc..by Western critics, show their OWN very much taste in movies, They might be crap for HINDI audience!


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 5:16 pm 
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Ebert is da man! :thumbs:

FYI, he have given worse movies good ratings (XXX)


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 7:58 pm 
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DragunR2 wrote:
DVD Collector wrote:
While I admire Roger Ebert the film critic. But here I think he's rated the film too high. IMO, Bend It Like Backham was a mediocre film at best, what bothered me the most about the film was it's self-indecisive script/narration and direction.

I thought it was a good enough film. Not necessarily 3.5 stars good, though. What about the film was indecisive for you?

I didn't think the film had a one mind track. There were many issues brought forth into it's central plot that side tracked what the film is essentially about(Soccer). Her problems with her parents, and how there ideologies differ from many aspects of life. Jessie's relationship with her white friend, and Jules being jealous of her, because Joe likes Jessie. And that whole uncalled for contrived segments of Jules mother thinking that Jessie has drived Jules into lesbianism!? Also, the desi friend Jessie had we find out that he's Gay, which was a funny part when we do find that out--but was it really needed to uplift the film in any way? And mostly, I didn't see any point to the contrast the film was heading towards with Jessies relationship with her parents and Joe's relationship with his dad. I don't disregard the film for having many issues, but at the end--nothing was resolved other than Jessie is finally allowed to play Soccer. And that last shot of jessie kissing Joe is more so for me to believe that the film was too self-indecisive.

JamesBond007 wrote:
Miss Malaprop are you coining your own words now "self-indecisive"

Speak for yourself.

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Edited By DVD Collector on 1047585556


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 13, 2003 9:00 pm 
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I too thought it was contrived that Jessie's parents thought she was a lesbian and that her guy friend was gay. But I didn't think they detracted from the film so much. There was enough I liked in it that little things didn't bother me.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 5:51 am 
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Hell now I am picking on you, is there no end to your stupidity?

Quote:
a one mind track





:D




Edited By JamesBond007 on 1047621254


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 3:32 pm 
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DragunR2 wrote:
I too thought it was contrived that Jessie's parents thought she was a lesbian and that her guy friend was gay. But I didn't think they detracted from the film so much. There was enough I liked in it that little things didn't bother me.

Huh? I find it contrived when gay and lesbian characters
don't exist in Hindi films except for caricatures for comic
relief (and "Fire"). Women playing soccer or boxing etc.
raises the question if this is unfeminine behaviour and
related to male orientation in sexuality too, so it's
completely ok if the film addresses this in its own (comic)
way.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 4:34 pm 
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Girls playing Soccer is common in Canada, these days. Specially for Ages till 15 or so. On registration day, you need to wait in the line-up for hours. If you don't register early, you don't get in.

I think in England too, Girls playing Soccer is common.

Rana


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 4:37 pm 
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field hockey too, American think that is girl's game!


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 14, 2003 7:34 pm 
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mhafner wrote:
DragunR2 wrote:
I too thought it was contrived that Jessie's parents thought she was a lesbian and that her guy friend was gay. But I didn't think they detracted from the film so much. There was enough I liked in it that little things didn't bother me.

Huh? I find it contrived when gay and lesbian characters
don't exist in Hindi films except for caricatures for comic
relief (and "Fire"). Women playing soccer or boxing etc.
raises the question if this is unfeminine behaviour and
related to male orientation in sexuality too, so it's
completely ok if the film addresses this in its own (comic)
way.

I'm not against gay characters in films, but in this film, Jessie's guy friend being gay was just another issue that seemed tacked onto the film. That issue of an Indian-British or Indian-American being gay and fearing his parents' reaction needs its own film. Otherwise the filmmakers can't really do it justice. The film is about an Indian-British girl whose parents do not want her to play sports. Why bring up an even greater issue and then treat it superficially? And someone thinking that someone else is gay when they're actually not has been done before. Even the sitcom "Friends" has done it several years back.


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