East Is East

East Is East

1999 "A comedy of families, a chip shop... and a very randy dog."
East Is East
East Is East

East Is East

6.9 | 1h37m | R | en | Drama

In 1971 Salford fish-and-chip shop owner George Khan expects his family to follow his strict Pakistani Muslim ways. But his children, with an English mother and having been born and brought up in Britain, increasingly see themselves as British and start to reject their father's rules on dress, food, religion, and living in general.

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6.9 | 1h37m | R | en | Drama , Comedy | More Info
Released: May. 14,1999 | Released Producted By: BBC , Film4 Productions Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

In 1971 Salford fish-and-chip shop owner George Khan expects his family to follow his strict Pakistani Muslim ways. But his children, with an English mother and having been born and brought up in Britain, increasingly see themselves as British and start to reject their father's rules on dress, food, religion, and living in general.

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Cast

Om Puri , Linda Bassett , Jimi Mistry

Director

Tom Conroy

Producted By

BBC , Film4 Productions

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Reviews

malikyounismalik OM Puri was an alumni of National School of Drama where he learned theater acting . The great Indian actors Naseer ud Din Shah and OM Puri were very close friends and met in the same institute. OM Puri was from underprivileged family and had a weak English while as Naseer was opposite to that. I was really was fascinated with the OM Puri's charater in this particular movie. He used to challenge himself by taking role like this where English was not his strength. He plays a Pakistani father role who has come to Britain in search of fortune and married a Brit women. The whole family affair is worth to watch especially OM Puri playing Muslim Pakistani father role...This is movie worth to watch....
johnnyboyz When the first Muslims from the colonies arrived in Britain in the 1950's, nobody really paid them much attention for the simple reason nobody really thought there needed be any. Islam was practically Christianity anyway, wasn't it? It was patriarchal; inherently conservative (if not more conservative); took a firm position on things such as the death penalty and had a rigorous idea of what constituted good sexual conduct. Many Muslims, suddenly finding themselves in a free and open democratic rather than a despotic Islamic one, left Islam altogether and became Christians anyway.By the 1970's, things had become more complicated - a series of radical reforms by Labour governments in the 1960's had changed Britain from being a country built on restraint, and into something else. Suddenly, things are more liberal - attitudes to a range of things from God to sex to the Empire are reset, and default positions take a staggering shift. To varying extents, Muslim people become outcasts - the fundamentals of their religion clash with the pervasive mood of the times, although the alternatives offering themselves to said mood do not seem to be on the side of ethnic minorities in the first place..."East is East" is a film from the mind of Ayub Khan-Din - somebody who seems to have been on the front-line of a lot of what transpired during this period - and covers both a family's inner-turmoils on top of a society's desperate staggering around for identity and meaning, as a series of violent dynamics are forced to fuse with one another. It is often a very funny film, but one finds difficulty in recommending it as a comedy; its grounded, even touching, coming-of-age narrative is too often undermined by a very distinctive post-1980's canon of crude American films for it to be a total success.In a small house in early 1970's northern England, an Islamic inter-racial marriage between Ella (Linda Bassett) and George (Om Puri) has produced a large family of boys and girls who, at this period in time, are more interested in chasing after girls; sneaking out to nightclubs; hiding from the bus that takes them to Koran school and refuting the veil than anything intrinsically "Islamic". Having triumphed in the 1970 election, Edward Heath occupies 10 Downing Street, but the 'conservative' triumph is a false-dawn - his party triumphs DESPITE Enoch Powell's "Rivers of Blood" speech of two years prior, not BECAUSE of it. The worries expressed by a certain Wolverhampton constituent of Powell's, which induced the speech, are not acted upon.The simmering non-white backlash the family seemingly live in constant fear of does not erupt in any especially manic, dangerous way - the kids in the family are far more frightened of their own father and what he might do to take their lifestyles away from them than anything else. Indeed, it is George himself who is guilty of one of the more nationalistic (or even bigoted) moments in the film when he proclaims his hatred of Indians following the patrician of Bangladesh thousands of miles away. In one of the more bizarre scenes perfectly capturing the ridiculousness of the situation England faced at the time, as numerous political and religious elements clash with one another, Enoch Powell's presence on a television screen speaking about immigration lends George's children hope that, with Powell's party in power, George himself may even be repatriated. Would the children have gone so far as to vote for John Tyndall's National Front party (who argued for the total repatriation of ALL non-whites) at such times of desperation had they been given the chance?. What holds "East is East" back from being a roaring success is, I suppose, the fact it thinks it ought to be more mainstream & accessible than it needs to be. The film feels too far removed from a really grounded, even disturbing, sense of realism you might find in a "La Haine" or anything coming out of post-Second World War Italy. The inflections of a classic, British kitchen-sink drama are certainly there, but they are undermined too often by a joke about circumcision or a gag on certain bodily functions which take you right out of the picture. It is all too often that Damien O'Donnell's film plays like a cross between "Saturday Night, Sunday Morning" and "American Pie", but with Asians. This may have been different if Khan-Din had decided to take the directorial reigns himself.In its rummaging around for some sort of direction, "East is East" settles on an arranged marriage to propel it through to its final act - something which results from its unfortunate inability to decide whether it is going down the road of accessible generic causality or something grittier. It had already been established as to how an estranged son of the family, who must be awkwardly telephoned from the veiled sanctuary of a phone booth away from the house by the rest of the family, conflicted with George over a preordained marriage agreement, so when the time comes for our rebellious leads to go through the process, we expect sparks to fly.And sparks do fly, in what is an often engrossing film about a strange time in contemporary British history, where nobody really knew all of the time who they were; where they belonged; where they were going; with whom they belonged and whose side they should back. There is more to recommend in "East is East" than dismiss, but one cannot do so without some reservations.
Andy Howlett This is a beautifully-made, bittersweet comedy drama with much to say about integration, the clash of cultures and the hierarchy within families, no matter what colour or culture they happen to be. I first saw this film soon after its release and since then I've probably watched it four or five times. Every time it appears on TV I find I am unable to resist it's wry humour and incisive social comment. There are some hilarious moments (such as the scene with the rather rude sculpture).It packs an enormous emotional punch for such a low budget production and puts many star-studded movies that have attempted to tell the same story to shame.
doc adams I cannot help but notice the subliminal messages of hatred and narrow mindedness which is incorporated through out the movie. Start with the glaring mistake of history shown in the early part of the movie when the opening says "george khan immigrated from Pakistan to england in 1937". There was no Pakistan in 1937. It was part of India. But if the film maker has said that George Khan immigrated from India in 1937 then people would have associated his character with indians and thats not the goal of this movie The goal of this movie is to ridicule Pakistan. Then the other scenes especially of bringing 1972 war totally out of context of the movie and putting sentences like "these bastard indians" truly shows what this movie is all about. It is not a comedy movie or drama. It is a pathetic futile attempt by tiny narrow minded Indians hiding behind the lens of the screen and just trying to ridicule their neighbor. Im not from Pakistan. Im a white irish American and I have more than a few pakistani friends and I don't agree with the content of this movie and I had to speak up in their defense. Nevertheless I gave 1 star to the movie for the aforementioned reasons and also I didnot find the movie funny and most of the time the "comedy" was done in awfully bad taste