West Is West (1987)

reviewed by
Thomas E. Billings


                             WEST IS WEST
                  A film review by Thomas E. Billings
                   Copyright 1989 Thomas E. Billings

Synopsis: A young man from Bombay arrives in San Francisco, hoping to gain admission to college. However, his sponsor has left the U.S., and the Immigration and Naturalization Service thinks he is a Sikh terrorist. He has only 24 hours to get married to a U.S. citizen -- or be deported. Naturally, he asks the only American woman he has met -- a thoroughly obnoxious punkette! A comedy/drama of culture shock.

U.S.A., color, 1989, 80 minutes.

Director/Writer/Film Editor: David Rathod Producer: Cristi Janaki Rathod Principal cast: Ashutosh Gowariker, Heidi Carpenter, Pearl Padamsee

The film is the story of Vikram, a nerdish young man from Bombay, who comes to San Francisco in anticipation that he will be admitted to U.C. Berkeley. As things turn out, his sponsor has left the U.S. for an indefinite period (returned to India). Vikram goes to one of the city's better hotels, only to find that a single room costs $175/night, rather more than he can afford.

He eventually ends up in a seedy hotel in the Tenderloin district (perhaps the city's worst neighborhood). The hotel is owned by one Mrs. Shah, a spirited ("salty" or "seedy" might be more accurate) immigrant from India. She gives Vikram a menial job, and he begins to explore America.

In his explorations, Vikram visits a supermarket, and develops a taste for junk food. He meets Sue, an obnoxious redheaded punkette, when she shows up at the hotel with a punk rock band and some groupies, trying to rent a single room for a "party." Later he runs into her at the movie theater where she works. Sue then introduces Vikram to the San Francisco punk scene.

Vikram is soon visited by a zealous agent of the INS, the Immigration and Naturalization Service. It seems that the INS thinks he might be a terrorist, and they want him out of the country. Mrs. Shah seizes the opportunity to offer to sponsor Vikram in the U.S., if only he will marry her niece. In an act of desperation, Vikram asks the only U.S. citizen he knows, the thoroughly vile Sue, to marry him, and the story continues from there.

This is the first feature film by its director, David Rathod, and it shows at times. Additionally, of the 3 principal cast members, only one has extensive acting experience, and this is apparent also. It's really not a bad movie; perhaps the best description would be "weak."

The film is weak in the following sense. It is advertised as a comedy, yet there is very little humor or comedy in the film. As a drama, it fares better, although it has a rather slow pace (obviously it's not an "action film"). The culture shock angle is used extensively in the film, but it is not handled very well -- it generates very few laughs.

Overall evaluation: only fair.  Consider for matinee price; really
                    not worth full price.

Reviewer: Thomas E. Billings, Department of Statistics University of California, Berkeley Reviewer contact: teb@stat.Berkeley.EDU

.

The review above was posted to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup (de.rec.film.kritiken for German reviews).
The Internet Movie Database accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review and has no editorial control. Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.
Please direct comments/criticisms of the review to relevant newsgroups.
Broken URLs inthe reviews are the responsibility of the author.
The formatting of the review is likely to differ from the original due to ASCII to HTML conversion.

Related links: index of all rec.arts.movies.reviews reviews