Ae
Fond Kiss Movie Review:
Loach
and Laverty are becoming experts at setting personal stories
against important political issues. This is their sixth
collaboration, and it's possibly their finest film--a beautiful
love story with astonishing ramifications.
After
growing up in Glasgow, the three Khan children are increasingly
less Pakistani. The eldest, Rukhsana (Avan), is happy with
a marriage arranged by their parents (Riaz and Bakhsh).
The youngest, Sadia (Akhtar), is quietly trying to break
the family ties so she can go away to university. And in
the middle, Casim (Yaqub) wants to keep everyone happy.
So it's a problem when he falls for Irish schoolteacher
Roisin (Birthistle), who's annoyed by Casim's family-honour
pressures ... until she faces up to the brutal demands of
her own culture.
The
film's striking success is the way Laverty and Loach focus
not just on the seeming tyranny of Asian-Muslim culture,
but also the even more unreasonable religious pressures
in the UK. Their even-handed approach examines expectations
and stereotypes with both sensitivity and indictment. This
is extremely intelligent filmmaking, and it follows beautifully
from their last feature Sweet Sixteen to examine modern
life in Scotland.
The
unknown cast is superb. Yaqub is so charming that we like
him immediately--like Roisin does--and we also grasp Casim's
double-edged life, separating his role as dutiful son from
real life outside the family. Even when Casim does or says
something horrible, we still like him--all credit to Yaqub!
Meanwhile, Birthistle makes Roisin a fascinating, exceptionally
strong-willed person we can identify with. The supporting
characters are also complex and intriguing--stubborn yet
sympathetic, fitting the stereotypes but never trapped by
them.
This
is a lively, bracingly natural film that's frequently very
funny and surprisingly sexy as well. Laverty and Loach wisely
open with their sermon this time (about the way diversity
in the Muslim community is ignored by the West), and then
concentrate on the love story. The result is an engaging
and lovely romance set against a powerfully charged backdrop;
it plays out like a serious version of East Is East, grappling
much more deeply with issues of race, religion, politics
and culture without being overwhelmed by them.
Rich
Cline
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