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other films
about
immigrants or
immigration,
eMail us at
films@murthy.com |
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We at MurthyDotCom are compiling a list of movies in which immigrants
or immigration play an important role, just as we believe they play an
important part in American life and culture. Whether art reflects life or
life reflects art, these films run the gamut between hilarity, drama, and
poignancy. If nothing else, you are sure to be entertained!
The Visitor (2007) Walter Vale (Richard
Jenkins) is a lonely economics professor in Connecticut. His life
is changed forever - and for the better - when he finds a couple of illegals,
who happen to be living in his New York apartment. Directed by Tom McCarthy
(The Station Agent 2003).
The Kite Runner (2007) Based on the acclaimed novel by Khaled
Hosseini, this film is about the power of a childhood friendship to endure
beyond a separation caused by war and by death. Directed by
Marc Forster (Stranger
Than Fiction 2006 and Monster's Ball
2001).
Under the Same Moon (2007)
Heartwarming story
about a mother who leaves Mexico to make a home for herself and her son (Adrian
Alonso). When the boy's grandmother dies, leaving him alone, he
sets off on his own to find his mother (Kate del
Castillo). Directed by Patricia Riggen.
Fox Searchlight purchased this film at the Sundance Film Festival.
Recognizing that this theme is more than just the plot for a movie,
the film's website has provided links to organizations that help to reunite
separated immigrant families.
Sentenced Home (2007) This documentary follows three Cambodian-American men,
brought to the U.S. as children by their refugee families. They were raised
in the grim public housing of Seattle, among gangs and other realities of
that life. Bad choices as teens altered their lives forever, when immigration
laws after 9/11 provided no second changes for such children. Though they
were raised in the U.S., speak to one another in English, even think in
English, each is sentenced to return to Cambodia - separated from family
here, possibly forever. Produced and directed by
Nicole Newnham.
A Slim Peace (2007) U.K. director Yael Luttwak follows 14 women
in the West Bank - Israelis, Palestinians, Bedouin Arabs, and American
settlers - who have the shared goal of losing weight. This universal
struggle is no less important and no less personal in a land of perpetual
conflict. Their common goal shows them that they have far more in common
than they would have believed. Premièred at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival.
Miss Universe 1929 (2007) Director Peter
Forgacs (El Parro Negro,
2005) returns to Tribeca with this true story of Marci Tenczer, amateur
filmmaker, who, smitten with his cousin, follows her from her modest
Austrian roots to her crowning as the first Miss Universe at a pageant in
Texas. Her rise coincides with that of Adolf Hitler, who turns the universe
upside-down.
Forging a Nation (2007) Director David
Blaustein retraced the steps of his Jewish ancestors accompanied
by his mother and a host of extended family. Having fled Europe in the
1920s, hoping for a bright future in Argentina, the journey of the film
becomes an exploration of the many people and the many factors that joined
to build Argentina. Presented for the first time in North America at the
2007 Tribeca Film Festival.
Beyond Belief (2007) This documentary premiered at the 2007
Tribeca Film Festival is the story of two amazing women who lost their
husbands in 9/11. Greif is turned to action as they are compelled to travel
to Kabul to help women the who are widowed there.
32nd Street
(2007) Premièred at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival, this film is
directed by Michael Kang; written by Michael Kang and Edmund Lee. It is the
story of an ambitious young attorney who pushes his way onto a homicide case
and infiltrates New York's Korean syndicate.
Pedro Nuestro (2007) Sundance 2007 brings us this film written
and directed by Christopher Zalla. Juan
and Pedro meet on a truck carrying illegal immigrants from Mexico to New
York. Pedro is on his way to find the father he has never known. He shows
Juan a letter of introduction, written by his deceased mother. When they
arrive in New York, Pedro wakes to find his new friend has vanished - along
with Pedro's belongings. Pedro Nuestro is a thriller about stolen identity,
but it is also a tale of the human need to be loved.
Never Forever (2007) This film from the Sundance film festival
is about a biracial American couple. When the woman is unable to conceive,
she boldly begins a relationship with an illegal immigrant from Korea. This
films has been praised for its art direction and costume design. Writer /
director Gina Kim has also received
accolades for her abilities and Vera Farmiga
for her role as the ethereal beauty, Sophie.
The Namesake (2006)
The film adaptation of
Jhumpa Lahiri's
acclaimed novel by the same name. Directed by Mira Nair (Monsoon
Wedding 2000), Kal Penn (Harold
and Kumar Go to White Castle 2004) stars as Gogol in this tale of
a first generation son of traditional, Indian immigrant parents. As he tries
to make a place for himself, not always able to straddle two worlds
gracefully, he is surprised by what he learns about his family and himself.
Golden
Venture (2006) Documentary by filmmaker
Peter Cohn that traces the lives of passengers of a freighter,
smuggling 286 immigrants, that ran aground near New York in 1993. Hoping
their expensive journey (at least $30,000 each) from China's Fujian Province
would buy them entry into the U.S. and the anonymity necessary to merge
unnoticed, the crash of the Golden Venture was the beginning of their
experience in American bureaucracy, as the whims of the INS and the U.S.
Department of Justice played out in the courts.
Fast Food Nation (2006) Writer / director
Richard Linklater (A
Scanner Darkly 2006) brings this dramatization of the non-fiction
book by Eric Schlosser to the big screen. A raw look at the impact the
fast-food industry has on American life and culture - which cannot be
portrayed without including undocumented workers.
Greg Kinnear (As Good as it Gets
1997), Catalina Sandino Moreno (Maria
Full of Grace 2004), and Paul Dano
(Little Miss Sunshine 2006) star.
Sweet Land
(2006) Based on Will Weaver's short story, "A Grave Made of Wheat,"
Sweet Land is a flashback to 1920s
Minnesota, when Lars Torvik's grandparents met on their wedding day that
wasn't. It is a story of love and trial and strength of will and prejudice.
It is the story of how the American heartland was settled by immigrants.
Olaf and Inge represent the grandparents and great-grandparents of many
Americans. Written and directed by Ali Salim,
himself the son of first-generation immigrants.
In Between Days (2006) Competitor in the independent drama
category at Sundance 2006, this is a coming-of-age film about a
KoreanAmerican teenager, though it is more than that and not easily
categorized, exploring many facets of humanity, relationships, and
communication. Starring
Jiseon Kim as Aimie, and
directed
by So Yong Kim, the dynamic between
director and actress expresses much more than dialog alone would accomplish.
God Grew Tired of Us (2006) Won the jury prize and audience
award for U.S. documentaries at Sundance 2006. The film follows three
Sudanese boys, refugees from Sudan's bloody civil war, as they try to adjust
to life in the U.S. Coming from unspeakable conditions, young witnesses of
unspeakable horrors, their honesty and goodness is unquestionable. And so
the question raised is, "What conditions create a civilized society?"
Directed by Christopher Quinn.
The Three Burials
of Melquiades Estrada
(2005) Tommy Lee Jones (Men
in Black 1997) stars in and directs this unusual movie about
promises, both kept and broken, and redemption. The truest expression of
love in the film is between Texas cowboy, Pete (Jones),
and his best friend, Melquiades (Julio Cesar
Cedillo), who has illegally crossed the border for work.
Barry Pepper gives a startling
performance as the heartless CBP officer.
Game 6 (2005) This is a quietly brilliant little film
about a Broadway playwright, Nicky Rogan (Michael
Keaton), whose opening night coincides during Game 6 of the 1986
World Series between the New York Mets and the Boston Red Sox.
Robert Downey, Jr. is the loathsome
critic who is about to plunge Nicky's career into the toilet. The immigrant
connection comes in with each taxi ride, and is a wonderful element of the
film. This is a story about connections. Connecting over the theatre.
Connection over taxis. And, largely, connecting over baseball.
Eve and the Fire Horse (2005) The search for salvation
evokes a kaleidoscopic blend of Buddhas and crucifixes, when the mother (Vivian
Wu) of two Chinese girls
(Hollie Lo and
Phoebe Kut)
brings bad luck on the household. Told from the child's point of view, this
delightful gem comes from writer / director Julia
Kwan (Three Sisters on Moon Lake
2001).
Romántico
(2005) This is a tale of two
Mariachi musicians who come to San Francisco, trying to make a better life
for themselves and scrape out a living. Eventually, Carmelo Sanchez has to
return to Mexico to care for his ailing mother. Directed by
Mark Becker.
La Tragedia de
Macario (2005)
Writer, director,
editor Pablo Véliz brought this
immigrant story to Sundance 2006 for its world premiere. In the title role,
Rogelio Ramos
is drawn to the U.S. to find a better life for his wife in this Spanish
language film. Joined by his best friend, the two set out on the dangerous
journey undertaken by so many each year. Véliz's insight is the desperation
that drives them and the spirituality that sustains them as they risk their
lives.
Quinceañera
(2005) A jury
prize and audience award winner in the U.S. drama competition at the 2006
Sundance Film Festival. Wash Westmoreland
and Richard Glatzer wrote and directed
this look into the life of an unconventional family and their Los Angeles
neighborhood, threatened by urban development, generally passed with windows
up and doors locked.
DeNADIE (2005) Presented in the World Documentary category at
Sundance 2006, this film comes from Mexico and follows the path traced by
many leaving South and Central America bound for freedoms and opportunities
too basic to be rightfully exclusive. A filmmaking neophyte,
Tin Dirdamal approaches the medium with
the sensitivity and skill of a veteran, drawing us into the oft-told story
of immigrant hardships, presenting it in a way that makes it more real and
personal than we possibly could have understood before.
Crossing Arizona
(2005) A documentary presented at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival,
this film explores escalating tensions over illegal immigration at their
epicenter - the Arizona / Sonora border. Human rights, national security,
class, and culture are explored through the personal experiences of the
locals on both sides of the border in this balanced look at the issues.
Directed by Joseph Mathew.
Everything is Illuminated (2005) Liev
Schreiber writes and directs this quirky film adaptation of the
novel by Jonathan Safran Foer, in which
a young Ukrainian man, Alex (Eugene Hutz)
and his grandfather (Boris Leskin) forge
an unlikely alliance with Jonathan Safran Foer (Yes, our hero has the same
name as the novel's author.). Jonathan (Elijah Wood)
is a young American Jew on a pilgrimage to the small village from which his
grandfather escaped, in search of the woman whom the family believes saved
their patriarch from the Nazis. Jonathan is not the only one who finds
something on this journey, however.
The Keeper : The Legend of Omar Khayyam (2005) Starring
Vanessa Redgrave (Julia
1978), a young boy, Kamran, learns that the 11th century Persian poet was
his ancestor. It becomes his responsibility to keep the oral history of his
family alive. This is the first film of Iranian-American director
Kayvan Mashayekh. a newcomer to the
filmmaking industry, having left his career as a lawyer in Houston.
Mashayekh was researching locations abroad on September 11, 2001, making the
financing and creation of this film all the more difficult.
Night of Henna
(2005) A film by Hassin Zee that
takes place in San Francisco, this independent production is about Hava (Pooja
Kumar), who has returned to the United States after a traditional
upbringing in Pakistan. At the very time when her eyes are opened to the
possibilities of life, those possibilities are threatened by her impending,
arranged marriage. Zee is a true Renaissance man, preferring to write,
direct, and produce films rather than make a career that uses his doctoral
degree in medicine.
Sueño (2005) This was the directorial debut of
Renee Chabria, who also wrote the
screenplay. A young man (John Leguizamo)
with musical aspirations leaves Mexico to realize his dreams of success in
America. There he meets Mirabella (Elizabeth Peña)
and Nina (Ana
Claudia Talancón), and finds
himself in a love triangle.
Saving
Face (2004) Written and directed by
Alice Wu, this is the story of a lesbian, Chinese-American doctor
in Manhattan and her pregnant, unmarried mother. It is a film that faces
taboos and the clash between first and 2nd generation immigrants with a
loving look at this mother-daughter relationship. (Michelle
Krusiec, Joan Chen, and
Lynn Chen)
Spanglish
(2004) Mexican mother,
Flor (Paz Vega),
enters the U.S. with her young daughter seeking a better life. When she
accepts a position as a domestic with an American family it becomes very
difficult to maintain her privacy and distance. A story about assimilation,
this film provides lessons on tolerance for the misguided but good
intentions of immigrants as well as the Americans who employ and/or befriend
them. Adam Sandler,
Tea Leoni, and
Cloris Leachman (The Last Picture Show
1971).
Bride and Prejudice (2004)
A Bollywood twist on Jane Austin's classic
novel Pride and Prejudice, the conflict between Darcy (Martin
Henderson) and Lalitha (Aishwarya
Rai) is cross-cultural as she makes a choice between the man she
wants and the man her mother wants for her.
Maria Full of
Grace (Maria Ilena eres de Gracia) (2004)
This film is billed as not being based on a true story, yet it is
something that happens everyday. Maria Alvarez (Catalina
Sandino Moreno) lives a modest life in a rural area outside
Bogotá, Colombia. At 17, her work and her life seem futureless, but Maria's
nature is strong and assertive. She meets Franklin (Jhon
Alex Toro) at a party. He is stylish and charismatic and tempts
Maria with talk of work involving adventure and travel to America. So Maria
becomes a mule in the dangerous drug underworld.
Joshua Marston (Bus to Queens
1999) directed this film that won awards at Sundance and Berlin.
The Terminal
(2004) This Steven Spielberg (Saving
Private Ryan 1998, Schindler's List 1994) film is about an eastern
European man, played by Tom Hanks (Forrest Gump 1995,
Philadelphia 1994) on his way to New York when his homeland is
overthrown in a coup. He arrives at Kennedy Airport as a man without a
country, without a valid passport. Kumar
Pallana (The Royal Tenenbaums
2001) plays Gupta. From Madras, Gupta becomes an unlikely hero in the
story.
A Day Without a Mexican (2004) One third of the population of
California are Latinos, Hispanics, Mexicans. How would it change life for
the state's other residents if this portion of the populous was suddenly not
there? Director
Sergio Arau
calls his film a "mockumentary." Yareli Arizmendi,
married to Arau, co-wrote and stars in the film. She says it is their hope
that lawmakers and moviegoers will recognize the valuable contributions
made everyday by
Latinos.
The Gatekeeper
(2004) MexicanAmerican John Carlos Frey
wrote, directed, and starred in this film about a U.S. Customs and Border
Patrol agent who turns vigilante and goes undercover to pursue those he sees
as "undesirables" crossing the U.S. border from Mexico. Things go very wrong
when he is caught in the midst of a Central American drug ring, surrounded
by those he has hated. But Frey's character begins to see the people as
individuals with families and the desire for a sense of 'home.' The most
valuable lesson is, perhaps, that humanity knows no borders.
Lost Boys of Sudan
(2003) This award-winning documentary by Megan Mylan and John Shenk
follows two of the many children who were among an estimated twenty thousand
forced from their homes and families by the 1987 civil war in southern
Sudan. Most were only six or seven years old when their journey began. Of
those who survived to reach the refugee camp in Kenya, almost 4,000 were
resettled in the U.S. to further their educations. This is the story of two
of those boys.
In
America
(2003)
Nominated for 3 Academy Awards, this is the story of a modern-day Irish
family who crosses the Canadian border, headed for New York in a struggle
to shake off their nightmares in search of their American dreams. While it
may not be wealth and success that they find, there is a neighbor who gives
them friendship and helps them to finally attain peace. Writer / director
Jim Sheridan (In the Name of the Father 1993, and
My Left Foot
1989) needed to look no further than his own childhood for inspiration
for this film.
Dirty
Pretty Things (2003) Oscar-nominated for its screenplay by
Steven Knight, this is a thriller is
about a gruesome underworld in London preying on the fear and desperation of
immigrants. Directed by Steven Frears (My
Beautiful Launderette 1985), the story centers around a Nigerian
immigrant, Okwe (Chiwetel
Ejiofor), who
drives a cab by day and works in a hotel by night and the young Turkish
woman (Audrey Tautou) he befriends. Okwe
discovers the ghoulish black market, putting their lives in danger.
House of Sand and Fog (2003) Nominated for three Academy
Awards, this directorial debut for
Vadim
Perelman is a
gripping drama in which
Sir Ben
Kingsley (Gandhi
1982) plays a proud Iranian colonel living a lie, when he finds an
opportunity to improve things for his family by purchasing a home being sold
at auction. But
Jennifer Connelly (A
Beautiful Mind 2001)
is losing her home - the last shred of hope in her life - through a
bureaucratic error, and she will not go down without a fight. It is a story
of the American Dream spinning out of control.
Shohreh Aghdashloo
received a nomination for Best Support Actress as the colonel's wife.
Green
Card Fever (2003) From
new director Bala Rajasekharuni, this is the story of a young
immigrant, played by Vikram Dasu, from India who overstays his U.S.
visa. Forced to decide who he can trust, he becomes emboldened when he
learns that in America, if you want something, you sue somebody for it!
Flavors (2003) Written and Directed by software
professionals Krishna D.K. and Raj Nidimoru, who have a talent for dialog,
Flavors is not a big budget film by the
standards of Hollywood or Bollywood. It was noticed by Variety,
however, and that is saying something! The two also made
Shaadi.com in 2001, in which each
makes an appearance in front of the camera.
Pieces of April (2003) While not central to the plot, the
immigrant neighbors of April (Katie Holmes)
help to save the day when her stove breaks on Thanksgiving. She tells them
the story of the first Thanksgiving and the spirit of the day prevails in
this off-beat independent film with Patricia
Clarkson and Oliver Pratt,
directed by Peter Hedges (About
a Boy 2003 and What's Eating Gilbert
Grape 1992).
Lana's
Rain (2003) Directed by Michael
Ojeda, Ukrainian born actress
Oksana Orlenko makes her American film debut in the title role
which won her a Best Actress award in the Milan International Film Festival.
Clinging to the only family she has left, Lana accompanies her brother,
Darko (Nickolai Stoilov) to the U.S.,
leaving Croatia following the Balkan Wars. Darko has survived through
criminal activity in Eastern Europe and this is all he knows. But Lana wants
simple things and a new life in America.
The Guru (2002) Ramu (Jimi Mistry)
is a dance instructor in the U.K. who decides he is going to America to
pursue the American dream. A fan of American movies since childhood, Ramu's goal is to become a film star. Through his
own naiveté and a series of coincidences, he fills in for an old guru at a
party attended by the rich and famous and becomes famous as a sex guru. Directed by
Daisy von Scherler Mayer with Marisa
Tomei (My Cousin Vinny 1992)
and Heather Graham (Boogie
Nights 1997).
Spellbound (2002) This documentary was an unexpected
success. It is about the 1999 National Spelling Bee championship competition
in Washington D.C. Dry subject? Not in the masterful hands of director
Jeffrey Blitz. The film celebrates the
diversity of America through the children competing and their families who
support them. Of the eight finalists, three are from immigrant families. The
competitors are old enough to have rich and individual personalities, yet
still young enough that they are not afraid to show themselves as who they really
are.
Gangs of New York (2002) Martin
Scorsese's (The Last Temptation of Christ
1988, Goodfellas
1990) epic film starring Leonardo DiCaprio (Titanic
1997), Cameron Diaz (There's Something About Mary 1998), and
Daniel Day Lewis (My Left Foot
1989), depicting the
ruthlessness and the division in a 19th century New York between those who
were here and the Irish trying to make room for themselves. It is a story of
deep-seeded revenge.
Real Women Have Curves (2002) Ana (America
Ferrera) has graduated from her east Los Angeles high school and
won a full scholarship to Columbia University. Rather than support her own
dreams, however, Ana's MexicanAmerican parents believe it is time for her to
work and help to support the family. Spending the summer working in a sewing
factory with other Chicanas, Ana learns a respect for these women and what
is essential for her to make her own way in the world.
Bend it Like Beckham (2002) This delight, directed by
Gurinder Chadha (A
Nice Arrangement 1994), is the story of
Jesminder Bhamra (Parminder Nagra),
daughter of strict Indian Sikh immigrants living in the U.K. Jess is a very
gifted football, or soccer, player. Unfortunately, her parents are less than
thrilled by this!
My Big Fat Greek Wedding (2002) An independent film directed
by Joel Zwick, written by
Nia Vardalos, who also starred in
the film with John Corbett and
Michael Constantine (The
Hustler 1961). Toula is the dutiful daughter, 30 years old and working
in the family-owned Greek diner. She meets and falls in love with Ian Miller
- not the nice Greek boy her family had in mind for her! How far are Toula and Ian
willing to go to make a marriage her family can live with?
ABCD (2001) Starring the acclaimed actress (and author of numerous books on Indian
cooking), Madhur Jaffrey
(Shakespeare Wallah 1965), as a widow
trying to reconcile the decision made decades earlier to move to the United
States. It is a story experienced by the children of immigrants the world
over. They know no country so well as the one in which they have grown up,
but don't feel connected to it or to the country from which their parents
came. They are adrift between cultures.
The Immigrant Garden (2001) The story behind this film reads
like a screenplay, itself. It is a pet, independent project of retired Hollywood
film producer, C. Tad Devlin (When
a Man Loves a Woman 1994), who left Hollywood for life in the small community
of Chehalis, WA. This is the story of a correspondence and friendship
between two gardeners - young Cecily in rural Washington and the 80-year-old
Mrs. Beauchamp in England. The story is rich in character because its
characters are rich, discovering themselves and understanding others.
Monsoon Wedding (2000) We include this
Mira Nair (Salaam
Bombay! 1988) film in our list of movies about immigrants because
of a character not most central to the story. Family members gather from all
over for the wedding of Adita (Vasundhara Das)
and Hemant (Parveen Dabaas). But painful
memories of a family secret surface for cousin Ria (Shefali
Shetty)
with the arrival of a revered uncle (Rajat Kapoor)
who now lives in the U.S. Also starring Roshan Seth
(Mississippi Masala 1991,
My Beautiful Launderette 1985).
Bread and
Roses (2000) The struggle for fair and just working conditions
in the United States has existed as long as there has been one group who
would take advantage of the desperation and fear of another. This film from
director Ken Loach (The
Wind that Shakes the Barley 2006) is the story of two sisters who
work as janitors. As undocumented workers from Mexico, they endure hardship
and abuses. When a young man (Adrien Brody)
comes around attempting to unionize workers, the issue divides them - while
dividing Maya and Rosa, as well.
Tortilla Soup (2000) It is a story that has been told and will
continue to be retold with every new generation and every culture that
immigrates to the U.S.
Hector Elizondo (Pretty Woman
1990) shines as the Mexican- American patriarch in this successful
adaptation of Eat Drink Man Woman 1994,
which told a part of the story from the Chinese perspective. It is the tale
of a father, his daughters, and the men in their lives. As with every
culture, especially when transplanted to another country, food plays a very
important part in cultural identity and connections. Directed by
Maria Ripoll.
Do££ar
Dream$ (2000) This chord rings familiar with many, as director
Sekhar Kammula, tells the tale of a
group of friends, answering the big question - whether or not to go to the
U.S. to make a lot of money. One in the group drops her studies to actively
pursue their responses.
Catfish in Black Bean Sauce (1999) Directed by
Chi Moui Lo, who also starred in the film, this is the story
of Vietnamese siblings, Dwayne (Lo) and
Mai (Lauren
Tom),
who were adopted by an AfricanAmerican couple (Paul
Winfield
and
Mary Alice)
in the U.S. Dwayne is engaged and has adjusted well to his American life.
Mai, however, was older when she left Vietnam. She has memories of her birth
mother and is driven to search for her.
La Ciudad (The City) (1999) This award-winning documentary by
writer / filmmaker David Riker played to
sold-out crowds in the New York art houses when it opened. It is a series of
four shorts Riker began making in 1992 about Mexican workers who come
to Manhattan - filled with the American dream but also afraid of the City.
Filmed in black and white, the photography has been compared to socially
conscious artists such as Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans. The film style
itself has been compared to that of Vittoria De
Sica's The Bicycle Thief
1948.
East is East (1999) George and Ella Khan (played by
Om Puri and Linda
Bassett) have seven children and lead a modest but happy life as
owners of a fish-and-chip shop in Salford, UK. Trouble begins when George, a
Pakistani-born Muslim, begins arranging marriages for his sons. The children
want to be British, their British mother wants to meld the two cultures into
a cohesive home for her family. It is not an unfamiliar tale. Directed by
Damien O'Donnell (Inside
I'm Dancing - aka Rory O'Shea Was Here
2004).
Hyderabad Blues (1998) Directorial debut from
28-year-old chemical engineer Nagesh Kukunoor,
this film shows that the confusion of ABCDs exists, not only in their
fitting into American culture, but also when they return to India after
growing up in the U.S. Produced largely with amateurs on a modest budget,
Hyderabad Blues is a romantic comedy
that thoroughly entertains and also presents some thought-provoking
questions.
The Journey (1997) Acclaimed painter-turned-writer /
director, Harish Saluja tells the story
of an Indian gentleman who comes to visit his son's
(Antony Zaki) family in
Pittsburg for, what becomes, an extended stay. Played by
Roshan Seth (Monsoon
Wedding 2000), the elderly visitor has difficulty understanding
his American daughter-in-law (Carrie
Preston). But he tries to fit into their lives, helping out when
he can or simply stepping aside when that seems the better thing to do. This
is a movie about cultural clashes and coming to feel comfortable in two very
different worlds.
Lone Star (1996) Writer / Director
John Sayles (The
Secret of Roan Inish 1994, Brother from
Another Planet 1984) masterfully blends one part Western, one
part murder mystery, and one part love story to create this tale of life in
a small Texas border town, topped off with Mexicans crossing the river under
cover of night. When the remains of the former sheriff are discovered, the
current sheriff, Sam, played by Chris Cooper
(Adaptation 2002), must solve the murder
of his own father. What he discovers leads to a web of lies and corruption
that touches everyone - including Sam's high school sweetheart, Pilar, played
by Elizabeth Pena (Tortilla
Soup 2000). Pena won an Independent Spirit Award for her role.
French Kiss (1995) Providing a different point of view,
Meg Ryan is Kate, an American emigrant.
Kate is becoming a Canadian citizen because she is marrying Charlie (Timothy
Hutton), a Canadian. But Charlie goes to Paris for a medical
convention, where he meets Juliet (Susan Anbeh).
He breaks his engagement to Kate, who flies to Paris to win Charlie back.
But on the way, she meets French boorish bad boy, Luc (Kevin
Klein). After losing her passport when she was not supposed to
leave Canada while her citizenship was pending, Kate finds herself "without
country" and she and Luc strike a bargain to get what each of them wants
most. Lawrence Kasden directs.
The Perez Family (1995) Marisa
Tomei (My Cousin Vinny 1992)
is Dottie Perez, a young Cuban woman with dreams of America that include
Rock & Roll and cowboys. Alfred Molina (Frida
2002) wants to be reunited with his wife (Angelica
Houston), who is in America. But when they reach America as Cuban
refugees, they are listed as married to one
another, greatly complicating things for both of them. Directed by
Mira Nair (Monsoon
Wedding 2002).
My Family (1995) Directed and co-written by
Gregory Nava (writer of
El Norte 1984, Frida 2002),
this film chronicles three generations of a MexicanAmerican family.
Beginning with the journey Jose Sanchez (Jacob
Vargas) makes on foot to Los Angeles, the plot follows the family
through their adjustment to life in America.
The Joy Luck Club (1993) Wayne
Wang (Smoke 1995) directed
this adaptation of Amy Tan's bestselling novel. It is the story of four
Chinese women who immigrated to the U.S. and their first-generation
daughters. When one of the women dies, her daughter, June (Ming-Na)
plays Mahjong with the older women and begins to really learn what her
mother endured in China and of her sisters who were left behind.
Masala (1993) The first film by director
Srinivas Krishna, this black comedy is
told with eccentric characters. The story follows a young Indian man, played by
Krishna, himself, who immigrates to Toronto after his family is killed in a
plane crash. The film is rich in story, characters, and color.
The Wedding Banquet (1993) This comedy by
Ang Lee (Sense
and Sensibility 1995) is the story of a successful
Taiwanese man (Winston Chao) in New York
whose parents insist it is time he marry. Rather than confess to them that
he is gay, he plans a fake marriage to a young artist (May
Chin). She is interested only in the green card, but his parents
want an elaborate banquet!
Heaven and Earth (1993) The final chapter of director
Oliver Stone's (Born
on the Fourth of July 1989, Platoon
1986) trilogy on the Vietnam War, Heaven and Earth
is about a soldier (Tommy Lee Jones) and
the Vietnamese wife (Hiep
Thi Le)
he brings home. Though they have left Vietnam, the effects are far from
behind them.
Combination Platter (1993) Presented at Cannes in 1993
for Tony Chen's direction, this is his
first American film, which is partly in English and partly in Cantonese and
Mandarin with subtitles. The setting is a Chinese restaurant in Flushing,
New York. Some employees are American-born Chinese (ABCs), some are from
China, some are American. The story centers around Robert (Jeff
Lau) who will do anything for his green card. Friends encourage
him to marry a citizen, but he is not comfortable with non-Asian women.
Household Saints (1993) Through two short films,
director Nancy Savoca (The
24 Hour Woman 2000) tells us the story of three generations of
women in a post-World War II Little Italy, New York. Catherine
Falconetti (Tracy Ullman) is forced into
a loveless marriage to (Vincent D'Onofrio)
Joseph Santangelo, complete with Mrs. Santangelo - the old-world
mother-in-law. When the matriarch dies,
Catherine ushers her family into a 20th century America, complete with
bright colors and Tupperware. Their daughter Teresa (Lili
Taylor), however, is not following her parents willingly. Steeped
in the tradition of Catholicism, Teresa's goal is sainthood.
Mississippi Masala (1992)
Denzel Washington (Training Day
2001, The Hurricane 1999) and
Sarita Choudhury (Kama
Sutra: A Tale of Love 1996) star in this story of cross-cultural
romance in the Deep South. She is the daughter of an Indian immigrant family
who came to the U.S. by way of Uganda. He is the AfricanAmerican she runs
into - literally. Directed by Mira Nair
(Monsoon Wedding 2001).
The Mambo Kings (1992) Two musician brothers (Armand
Assante and Antonio Banderas)
decide to leave Cuba in the 1950s to break into the hot, Latin music scene
in New York. Desi Arnez, Jr. plays his
father in this film, who is but one real life example of the fact behind
this work of fiction. In his first English-language role, Banderas did not
yet speak any English, but learned his lines phonetically.
Far and Away (1992) Ron Howard
(A Beautiful Mind 2001,
Splash 1984) directed
Tom Cruise and
Nicole Kidman in this film that manages to tell the story of both
poor and wealthy immigrants from Ireland. While there was a distinct class
separation when the two were in their homeland, upon reaching New York they
were both despised as Irish. This is the story of their quest for the
American dream.
Green Card (1990) Directed by Peter Weir (The Year of
Living Dangerously 1982, Dead Poets Society 1989), this romantic
comedy is about George (Gerard Depardieu) and Bronte (Andie
MacDowell). He is from Paris and wants a green card. She is an American
who needs a husband to qualify for the green house apartment of her dreams. When the
INS gets involved, this is anything but a match made in heaven - or is it?
Avalon (1990) In this film, writer / director
Barry Levinson
(Rain Man 1988), chronicles a Jewish family that immigrates to
the United States from Poland in pursuit of the American dream. Starring
Leo Fuchs,
Joan Plowright (Enchanted April 1992),
Aidan Quinn,
Elizabeth Perkins, and a 9-year-old Elijah Wood (Lord of the
Rings 2003). How does America change them?
The Paper Wedding (1990) Made before, but released after
Green Card, this is the story of a
university professor (Genevieve Bujold)
who marries a Chilean dissident (Manuel
Aranguiz) as a favor to her sister who is an immigration lawyer.
Directed by Michel Brault (Mon
Amie Max 1994), everything seems simple and straight forward,
until the immigration investigation begins. Now they must live together.
With English subtitles.
Eat a Bowl of Tea (1989)
Wayne
Wong
(Joy
Luck Club
1993) directed this film about a young ChineseAmerican soldier (Russell
Wong)
who returns from WWII and is bullied by his father (Victor
Wong)
into an arranged marriage with a Chinese girl (Cora
Miao).
Wong's film is about a search for ethnic identity.
Coming to America
(1988) Eddie Murphy (Shrek
2001) and Arsenio Hall star in this
hilarious film by director John Landis (Blues
Brothers 2000). On his 21st birthday, the Prince of Zamunda is
to marry a woman he has never met. Breaking with tradition, he chooses to
come to America, in search of the love of his life.
Stand and Deliver
(1988) This is the inspiring true story about an immigrant teacher
working in his Hispanic community in L.A. To the credit of Jaime Escalante (Edward
James Olmos) and his creative teaching, students in one of the
country's toughest neighborhoods turn from gang life to become top algebra
and calculus students. Escalante believed in them when no one else cared.
Olmos (Selena 1997) was nominated for an
Academy Award for his role, as was Lou Diamond
Phillips (La Bamba 1987) for
his supporting role as one of the students. Directed by
Ramon Menendez.
Born in East L.A.
(1987) Comedian Cheech Marin
directed, wrote, and stars in this comedy about Rudy, who is caught in an
INS sweep of illegal workers at a factory. Without any ID, Rudy is unable to
convince authorities that he is American, and ends up deported to Mexico
with no knowledge of Spanish and no idea how to get back home.
Living on Tokyo Time
(1987) Ken (Ken Nakagawa) is shy
and into rock & roll. Kyoko (Minako Ohashi)
is beautiful and determined. Introduced by a mutual friend, Ken marries
Kyoko, whose green card is expiring, so that she can remain in the U.S. And
then the unexpected happens when he falls in love with her. Directed by
Steven Okazaki (Black
Tar Heroin: The Dark End of the Street 2000). Nominated for the
1987 Grand Jury Prize at Sundance Film Festival.
An American Tale
(1986) This animated musical directed by Don Bluth is the story of the
Mouskowitz family - a family of Jewish mice living in Russia at the time of the
revolution. They have dreams of America, the land with no cats where all the
streets are paved with cheese. When the youngest becomes separated from his
family, he learns life lessons of tolerance, survival, and the strength of
the familial bond. With the voices of Dom DeLuise,
Madeline Kahn, and Christopher Plummer.
Dim Sum : A Little Bit of
Heart (1985) Chinese immigrant, Mrs. Tam (Kim
Chew), is told by a fortune-teller that this is the year she will
die. She longs to return to China to pay her respects to her ancestors. She
is also longing for her daughter, Geraldine (Laureen
Chew), to marry. A sweet portrayal of this ChineseAmerican family
in San Francisco. Another film from director Wayne
Wang
(Joy
Luck Club
1993).
Stranger Than Paradise
(1984)
Director
Jim Jarmusch
(Coffee and Cigarettes 2004) influenced
the direction of American independent filmmakers with his unusual style in
this film. Eva (Eszter Balint) is moving
to the U.S. from Eastern Europe and informs her cousin, Willie (John
Lurie), that she will be staying with him for ten days before
going on to their aunt in Ohio. Willie, a small-time gambler, tells his
friend, Eddie (Richard Edson), that she
will cramp their style, but Eddie likes Eva. Willie introduces her to
American TV and TV dinners and Eva proves to be surprisingly street savvy,
herself.
Moscow on the
Hudson (1984)
Touring the U.S. with a band during the cold war, a Soviet saxophone player, played by
Robin
Williams (Good Will Hunting 1988,
Good Morning, Vietnam 1987), defects
to the U.S. while in Bloomingdale's. But adjusting to American life is more difficult
than he imagines. Directed by Paul Mazursky (Harry
and Tonto 1974).
El Norte
(1983) The Guatemalan army discovers Mayan Indian peasants who have
begun to organize, hoping to rise above their label of "brazos fuertes" or
"strong arms" (manual laborers). The army massacres their families and
destroys their village to give the new recruits no choice but to follow and
obey. However, two teenage siblings survive and are determined to escape to
the U.S. or El Norte. They make their way to L.A. - uneducated, illegal
immigrants, alone.
Sophie's Choice
(1982)
Meryl
Streep
(Kramer
vs. Kramer 1979,
Angels in America
2003) is breathtaking in her Oscar-winning role as Sophie, a PolishCatholic survivor of Auschwitz who makes her way to the U.S. after the war.
Also with
Kevin
Klein (A
Fish Called Wanda
1988) and
Peter
MacNicol. Directed by
Alan
J. Pakula (The
Sterile Cuckoo 1969,
Klute
1971), the son of a Polish immigrant.
The Godfather,
Part II (1974)
All
of the films in this Francis Ford Coppola
(Academy Award, Best Director, 1975) trilogy surround the Corleone family.
The ties between the family in New York and the family in Sicily are
depicted in a way in this film, especially, that is likely felt on some
level by all immigrant families in the U.S. Robert
di Niro (Academy Award for this supporting character, 1975)
portrays the young Vito and learned Italian in order to be as authentic as
possible in the role.
Nybyggarna (The New Land) (1972) Director Jan Troell's
sequel to Utvandrarna (1971).
Utvandrarna (The Emigrants) (1971) From Swedish director
Jan Troell, comes a film that has been
touted as one of the greatest Swedish films of our time - certainly one of
the best depictions of the immigrant experience. Starring film history's
legends, Max von Sydow (Pelle
the Conqueror 1987) and Liv Ullman
(Lost Horizon 1973). Ullman was
nominated for an Oscar and won the Golden Globe for this role.
Popi (1969)
Alan Arkin (Little
Miss Sunshine 2007) and
Rita Moreno (West
Side Story 1962) star in this comedy about a Puerto Rican
widower, living in Harlem, who puts his children aboard a raft off of
Florida's coast. Scheming for a better life for his family, Popi believes
the cute "asylum-seekers from Cuba" will win hearts in America. Directed by
Arthur Hiller (Love
Story 1971).
The Party (1968) Peter Sellers (Dr. Strangelove
1964, Being There 1980) shines in this
Blake Edwards (Honorary
Award 2004) comedy, which has become a classic full of unconventional
humor. Sellers portrays an Indian actor who is mistakenly invited to a party
intended for Hollywood executives. The clash of cultures and Sellers's
comedic talents are sure to give you more than a belly laugh or two!
America, America (1963) Written and directed by
Elia Kazan (On
the Waterfront 1954), this story begins around 1900 with a poor
Greek in Turkey. A second-class citizen there, selling ice in the
marketplace and enduring humiliation on a daily basis, he is determined to
escape to America by way of Constantinople. Starring
Stavros Topouzoglou
and
Vartan Damadian.
West Side Story (1961)
Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins directed
this Oscar-winning musical. It's a modern-day Romeo and Juliet story, or it
was 40+ years ago when it was made. Rather than feuding families, however,
the plot centers around two New York street gangs. Maria (Natalie
Wood) is a Puerto
Rican immigrant whose brother belongs to the Sharks, and Tony (Richard
Beymer) is the
American boy she loves, who is a former member of the Jets. Once a Jet, always a Jet?
I Remember Mama (1948) Barbara Bel
Geddes portrays an aspiring writer and daughter of Norwegian
immigrant parents, played by Irene Dunn
and Edgar Bergan. A warm tale of a
close-knit family and children who believe their Mama can do anything.
Nominated for five Academy Awards, including Best Black & White
Cinematography, Best Actress (Miss Dunn) and three Best Supporting Actress
nominations, including for Miss Bel Geddes.
My Girl Tisa (1948) Overlooked because of the political
climate when it was released, this film portrays the New York lower East
Side society of the period. Boarding houses, looking for work, the constant
fear of deportation, the anxiety over the citizenship test. German-born
actress Lilli Palmer stars as Tisa and
Sam Wanamaker (nominated for an Emmy for
his 1978 role in Holocaust) is the attorney who helps
her. Directed by Elliott Nugent.
Music in My Heart (1940) This old musical stars
Rita Hayworth (Gilda,
1946) as the American beauty living in an immigrant neighborhood of New York
with her kid sister, when she collides (literally) with
Tony Martin, a penniless actor who is
being deported. Full of plot twists and characters with complicated
relationships, this film even has a lovesick monkey!
The Immigrant (1917) This is a classic for film
students. Charlie Chaplin (Limelight
1952, The Great Dictator 1940) stars in
this silent picture about his little tramp, traveling steerage to immigrate
to the U.S. with the throngs who came at the beginning of the 1900s. He
shows us what this felt like with the humor and poignancy only Chaplin
possessed.
Copyright © MURTHY LAW
FIRM. All Rights Reserved
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