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Similar Products : [More Information ...] Earth A tragedy set against the ethnic violence of India's independence in 1947, the second film in Deepa Mehta's elemental India trilogy is even more incendiary than her controversial Fire. Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, and Parsees alike buzz like bees around the lovely flower Shanta (Nandi... |  Water The profoundly moving story of chuyia an indian girl married and widowed at eight years old who is sent away to a home where hindu widows must live in penitence. Chuyias feisty presence deeply affects the other residents forcing each to confront their faith and societys prejudice... |  Monsoon Wedding Monsoon Wedding is a return to form for Mira Nair, director of 1988's Salaam Bombay! Nair's gift for observation of the everyday and her love for her characters make for a delightful film, which spins a web of family relationships that knit and break during a wedding at a perfect... |  Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love If you're looking for a deep, intelligently romantic movie with complex characters and a richly rewarding plot, don't bother with Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love. On the other hand, if you're feeling sexy and in the mood for a lush, seductive, and visually stunning film set in 16th-ce... |  Salaam Bombay (Widescreen Special Edition) Mira Nair (Monsoon Wedding) adds her angry voice to the cinema of forgotten children in this wrenching drama of an 11-year-old boy (real-life street kid Shafiq Syed) who heads to the big city and joins a sea of homeless kids and down-and-out adults scrambling to survive the pi... |  The Namesake Adapted by screenwriter Sooni Taraporevala from the novel by Jhumpa Lahiri, director Mira Nair's The Nameksake is populated by well-drawn characters and filled with memorable shots and engaging scenes. But in the larger sense, the film is a provocative look at the two sides of im... |  Loving Annabelle A lot of taboos are broken in Loving Annabelle, even if the film itself remains remarkably tasteful--even demure. The central characters are two women, a teacher and her student, and the setting is an all-girls school (shades of Lost and Delirious). Annabelle (the smoldering Erin... |  Saving Face Saving Face starts like you might expect a Chinese-American lesbian romantic comedy to start: Young surgeon Wilhelmina (Michelle Krusiec, in her first starring role) has kept her sexual orientation secret from the conservative Chinese community of Flushing, NY--but when her mothe... |  Fingersmith From Sarah Waters, author of Tipping the Velvet, comes this twisting and twisted Victorian-era thriller with an L-word charge. Sally Hawkins stars as Sue, an orphan who grows up among the reprobates of Lant Street to become an accomplished "fingersmith" (thief). Elaine Cassidy co... |  The Journey In The Journey (Sancharram) beautiful young Kiran falls in love with her lifelong best friend the effervescent Delilah. But in their idyllic Indian village tradition still dictates that a girl marry a boy chosen by her family. With longing in her heart Kiran refrains from express... |
Earth Water Monsoon Wedding Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love Salaam Bombay (Widescreen Special Edition) The Namesake Loving Annabelle Saving Face Fingersmith The Journey
Reviews:
Mehta Ignites a 'Fire' of Controversy with Her Unfulfilled Housewives. Deepa Mehta is best known for her extraordinary trilogy: Fire (1996), Earth (1998), and Water (2005). Set in contemporary Delhi, India, the first film in the series, Fire, ignited a controversy upon its 1988 release with its frank depiction of loveless, arranged marriages and lesbian sexuality. Shabana Azmi and Nandita Das star as unhappily married sisters-in-law, Radha and Sita, living together under the same roof with their husbands. In fact, the entire extended family lives above a sundries and video store run by Radha's husband. Radha is unable to conceive. ("Sorry, no eggs in ovary," the doctor explains to her.) Sita is neglected by her husband, Jatin (Javed Jaffrey), who is in love with Julie, a Chinese-Indian. When the two unfulfilled women turn to each other for emotional support, they soon become find themselves engulfed in the flames of passionate desire for each other. Radha's husband, Ashok (Kulbhushan Kharbanda), eventually discovers Radha and Sita in bed together, a discovery that confuses him and threatens to tear the family apart.
Fire is compelling on many levels. On one level, it may be experienced as a touching love story between two women. On another level, the film offers a scathing critique on oppresive Indian social system and its customs of arranged marriages, religious hypocrisy, sexism, and valuing women only as breeding chattel. The film also offers a lesson in what happens when basic human desires are ignored: Radha and Sita are seemingly transformed from heterosexual women into lesbian lovers. Highly recommended.
G. Merritt The second Deepa movie I've viewed and it was very well done A clash of the old and new. This movie could have been made in any country 50 years ago. The struggle between the modern world and the family traditions. The two wives in loveless marriages find they have a lot in common and become confidents and close friends and then, longing for companionship and tenderness, become lovers. This is one of the most un-offensive lesbian movies I've ever seen. The two actresses make it seem almost natural and beautiful. I really enjoyed this movie. Keep them coming Deepa! Enjoy. Worth Viewing This isn't Biji's Bollywood. This is Deepa Mehta's New Delhi, India, during a time of transition. Fire is about burning desire-- for passion, for life, for the vision that is behind the eyes. This is not a love story, per se, but a liberation story.
The story line is quite basic: in a middle class family, one husband devotes himself to his swami and vows celibacy while his younger brother, forced into a traditional wedding, continues to see his lover. Both wives tend to the restaurant and their husbands' mother, following traditional roles of subservience. Until they discover, or uncover, their passion for one another.
So if the plot is not the draw, why watch this film? It gives a glimpse of the upcoming middle class (late 1990s) life--the juxtaposition of uberurban cosmopolitan life and traditional mores. It is India trying to grow into itself.
Interesting Low Key Movie about Lesbian Love in India Two women in undesirable arranged marriages in India begin to desire each other. While male sexually in all its forms are overlooked if not approved of, the women endure more disapproval and social stigma. Interesting take on lesbianism in a culture in which there is no such word for it or concept in the culture. Part of a trilogy with Earth and Water. Earth I haven't seen. Water won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film and is about a child bride who is cast off as a widow by age 8. I highly recommend Deepa Mehta's films. They are not Bollywood. A Must See Movie This was a fabulous movie! It goes to show you that there are all kinds of people around you that you don't even know! It was a very sad movie however, a real tear jerker!
I was really moved by the actresses in the movie, they really played the parts extremely well! |
Keyword: Video,
Description: Fire

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