
Mira Nair's Monsoon Wedding, just out in a new 2-DVD set from Criterion,
is the India native's contribution to the unofficial canon of
directors' final works from the homeland before emigrating to the
United States. Like Milos Forman's Fireman's Ball, Louis Malle's Murmur of the Heart or Susanne Bier's After the Wedding, Monsoon
presents the complex story of a multi-faceted, changing nation through
a single tight-knit community. The community here being an upper-middle
class Punjabi family converging in New Delhi for an elaborate wedding.
Aditi (Vasundhara Das) is a modern working woman who wants to settle
down but has a full-time job and an emotionally absent lover that
occupy too much of her time to date effectively. She's acquiesces to a
partially-arranged marriage (the family picks the suitor but they meet
a few times beforehand) and the ceremony is fast-tracked so their new
lives can begin. And as with most family procedures everyone is sure to
bring plenty of baggage. We witness Aditi's more modern sister trying
to talk the bride out of going through with it, a shy servant girl fall
in love with the gregarious wedding planner, a stressed out aunt trying
to shield the children from a predator she feels powerless to confront
and a young nephew arguing unsuccessfully to keep from being sent to
boarding school.
Read the rest of this review at Greencine.
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