Heat and Dust
Dir: James Ivory, 1983 (9*)
Beautiful story by Ruth Prabwar Jvabvala, based on her novel, another Merchant/Ivory film (Room With a View, Passage to India). Julie Christie is a woman who inherit’s her deceased aunt’s diary, based on her life in India, and she decides to go to India and retrace her aunt’s footsteps. The story of the aunt is told in flashbacks: a young British wife, Greta Scacchi, bored with her military husband always being away on duty, is befriended by a local Indian prince, The Nawob, played by Scacchi’s real-life husband Shashi Kapoor, which is highly improper of course. Nicholas Grace (also in Brideshead Revisited) turns in a strong performance here as well. The two stories are deftly blended together, and we get romances decades apart and in two different Indias, separated by time, one colonial, one independent; this brilliantly tells a classical style romance through a modern perspective.
Beautiful story by Ruth Prabwar Jvabvala, based on her novel, another Merchant/Ivory film (Room With a View, Passage to India). Julie Christie is a woman who inherit’s her deceased aunt’s diary, based on her life in India, and she decides to go to India and retrace her aunt’s footsteps. The story of the aunt is told in flashbacks: a young British wife, Greta Scacchi, bored with her military husband always being away on duty, is befriended by a local Indian prince, The Nawob, played by Scacchi’s real-life husband Shashi Kapoor, which is highly improper of course. Nicholas Grace (also in Brideshead Revisited) turns in a strong performance here as well. The two stories are deftly blended together, and we get romances decades apart and in two different Indias, separated by time, one colonial, one independent; this brilliantly tells a classical style romance through a modern perspective.
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