Provoked:  A True Story
 (India-U.K.)

 By DEREK ELLEY















Naveen Andrews terrorizes Aishwarya Rai in 'Provoked: A True Story.'






An Eros Intl. release of a Media One Global Entertainment presentation,
in association with Motion Picture Partners Intl. and British Media
Fund Intl. (International sales: Eros, London.) Produced by Sunanda
Murali Manohar. Executive producers, J. Murali Manohar, Firuzi Khan.
Co-executive producer, Nigel Glynn-Davies. Co-producer, Vinod Popat.
Directed by Jag Mundhra. Screenplay, Carl Austin, Rahila Gupta, based
on the book "Circle of Light" by Gupta, Kiranjit Ahluwalia.
 
Kiranjit Ahluwalia - Aishwarya Rai

Veronica Scott - Miranda Richardson

Deepak Ahluwalia - Naveen Andrews

Miriam - Rebecca Pidgeon

Radha Dalal - Nandita Das

Edward Foster - Robbie Coltrane

DS Ron Meyers - Steve McFadden

Anil Gupta - Raji James

PC James O'Connell - Nicholas Irons

Jackie - Deborah Moore

Doreen - Lorraine Bruce
 




Asian dramatic sensibilities bring color and emotion to "Provoked,"
a battered-immigrant-wife drama that, in British filmmaking hands,
could have been merely a downbeat, right-on trawl. Mixed Indian and
Western cast -- with Bollywood queen Aishwarya Rai surrounded by
stalwarts like Miranda Richardson, Robbie Coltrane and Rebecca Pidgeon
-- turn the true story of a case that changed British law into an
old-style melodrama (in the best sense) complete with a feel-good
ending. With strong reviews, solid business looks likely, with some
crossover beyond the curry belt. Pic also opens the Indian Film
Festival in Los Angeles on April 17.Largely English-language pic
goes out in India in a variety of regional-language versions, but will
mainly appeal there to metro auds. Much will depend on Rai's local
pulling power (not necessarily guaranteed in the past), though the
current hype surrounding her upcoming marriage to actor Abhishek
Bachchan won't hurt one bit.
Main surprise is that pic was
directed by veteran journeyman Jag Mundhra, whose 20-odd-year career
has encompassed direct-to-vid soft-porn schlockers (several with
"Provoked" co-scripter Carl Austin), as well as occasional, more
serious movies (2000's "Bawandar," aka "Sandstorm"). Working from a
screenplay that adheres pretty closely to the facts, Mundhra delivers a
work that plays like a toned-down version of mainstream Indian cinema,
with d.p. Madhu Ambat's saturated lensing and well-composed widescreen
visuals bringing a South Asian feel to the U.K.-set material.
Pic
gets straight down to business as, on the night of May 9, 1989,
British-born Indian Deepak Ahluwalia (Naveen Andrews) is horribly
burned in the bedroom of his suburban London home. Kiranjit (Rai), his
Punjabi wife and mother of two, is found in shock outside.
Not
denying the charge of incinerating her spouse, Kiranjit (who speaks
little English) is accused of attempted murder when her prints are
found on the gasoline can. Though her body shows evidence of regular
beatings, her barrister Miriam (Pidgeon, with a slightly wobbly English
accent) says she can't claim self-defense, as Deepak was asleep at the
time. Case is also taken up by sparky Indian-born activist Radha Dalal
(Nandita Das).
When Deepak finally dies from his burns, Kiranjit
is charged with first-degree murder, brought to trial in December and
sentenced to life in prison.
Multiple story strands keep the pic
moving without focusing solely on Kiranjit, a gentle, passive soul who
tells Radha she feels "free" in jail after years of spousal abuse.
Early on, flashbacks to the early years of her marriage start
punctuating the narrative. And in a smart dramatic move, the script
also sketches Kiranjit's jailmates in some detail, especially tough but
tender cell companion, Veronica "Ronnie" Scott (Richardson), and prison
bully Doreen (TV's Lorraine Bruce).
With Rai dignified in a
largely reactive role, it's the playing by thesps like Richardson and
Das, both excellent, that broadens the pic's emotional palette. As
Radha and lawyer Anil Gupta (Raji James), build a case for appeal, and
sympathetic ex-cop James O'Connell (Nicholas Irons) gives crucial new
evidence, the movie becomes a genuine heartwarmer, with a rousing court
perf by Kiranjit's new barrister (Coltrane).
Main weakness is
that, in the flashbacks, Deepak's role has little backgrounding, and
his violent outbursts are given no psychological underpinnings. Picture
is more a quality meller, with clearly defined heroes and villains,
than a slice of social realism. But for viewers prepared to go with the
flow, it works at a gut, movie-movie level.
Technical package is
smooth, with a warm score by star Indian composer A.R. Rahman. For the
record, Kiranjit Ahluwalia's case was instrumental in getting U.K. law
to recognize battered-wife syndrome.


Camera (color, widescreen), Madhu Ambat; editors, Mundhra, Sanjeev
Mirajkar; music, A.R. Rahman; production designer, Peter Joyce; costume
designer, Sarah Tapscott; sound (Dolby Digital/DTS Digital), C. Anand,
H. Sridhar; assistant directors, Antara Bhardwaj, Kevin Westley, Ian
Dray; casting, Patricia Rose. Reviewed at Courthouse Hotel preview
theater, London, March 21, 2007. (Also in Indian Film Festival, Los
Angeles -- opener.) Running time: 111 MIN.
 


With: Ray Panthaki, Leena Dhingra, Julie T. Wallace, Maxine Finch, Claire 
Louise Amias, Wendy Albiston, Karen David, Guy Siner.
(English, Punjabi dialogue)

Reply via email to