Product Description Salford, 1971 and Pakistani chip shop owner George Khan (Om Puri) lives with his white wife Ella (Linda Bassett) and their seven children. George wants to raise his children as devout Muslims, but things go wrong when his eldest son Nazir (Ian Aspinall) flees his arranged marriage midway through the ceremony. Undeterred, George plans a marriage for his son Tariq (Jimi Mistry), but when Tariq discovers what is happening he rebels against his father, and the future of the family is plunged into doubt. From .co.uk Manchester in 1971 is not the ideal time and place to raise a proper Pakistani family. But George Khan (Om Puri), father of seven unruly moppets and husband to a wilful British wife (Linda Bassett), is determined to wield his influence over his clan. But what a clan this is, with Nazir (Ian Aspinall), who refuses his arranged wife; Saleem (Chris Bisson) who creates--shall we say controversial?--works of art; Tariq (Jimi Mistry), the mod boy who lives for discos and English girls; Meenah (Archie Panjabi), the only girl and tomboy extraordinaire; and Sajid (Jordan Routledge), who lives in a dirty fur-trimmed parka. Abdul (Raji James) and Maneer (Emil Marwa) stay more quietly in the background, although they lend their voices to the chorus of dissent against traditional ways. East Is East is Damien O'Donnell's directorial debut, and he nails the raucous tone from the opening scene, a church parade where the Pakistani children must do some deft manoeuvring to avoid being seen by their Muslim father. At times such as these, the film is a straightforward comedy, and the children milk the cultural differences for every laugh they can. Yet the film takes a more sombre turn when Saleem balks at his father's insistence on arranging Saleem's marriage. Puri is magnificent straddling the line between lovable father and brute enemy as he demands that the others obey his will, and his performance can be difficult to watch as he metamorphoses. Sympathies toward the characters shift throughout the film, highlighting the superb acting of the entire cast. Ultimately, though, humour wins out, making East Is East a tremendously fun film. --Jenny Brown P.when('A').execute(function(A) { A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse', function(data) { window.scroll(0, data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100); }); }); Synopsis Set in the early 1970s, East Is East follows the lives of a Pakistani-English family living in Northern England. George Khan (Om Puri), a proud Pakistani immigrant, and his British wife, Ella (Linda Bassett), run a fish and chip shop, while raising their seven children. George is determined to honor Pakistani tradition by arranging marriages for each of the children, whether they like it or not. When the Khan kids--including the nightclubbing Tariq (Jimi Mistry), the artsy Saleem (Chris Bisson), and the shy, parka-wearing Sajid (Jordan Routledge)--begin to rebel against their forceful father, their mother also joins the household mutiny. The family's conflict hits its peak during an awkward nuptial meeting with the snobby Shahs and their two unappealing daughters, and the results are rather surprising. With his first feature film, director Damien O'Donnell convincingly recreates the 1970s setting and carefully avoids glossing over the Khan family's difficulties. Puri and Bassett are excellent as the well-meaning parents, while Routledge is particularly charming as the reclusive youngest son. A quirky comedy that doesn't shy away from tense drama, East is East is a truly unique film. See more
A**R
Wicked Film
In EAST IS EAST, George (Om Puri), who is Pakistani, marries Ella (Linda Bassett) and they settle down in Manchester to have seven children and run a fish and chips shop. George wants his children to adopt the religion and customs of Pakistan, yet oldest son Nazir objects to an arranged marriage and bolts in the middle of the wedding ceremony, and in all the family chaos, they have neglected to have their youngest son circumcised. With India at war with Pakistan, George's fear of the loss of his homeland and culture makes him even more concerned about passing on that culture to his children. They go to the mosque, grudgingly, but they feel like Brits and only one of the seven kids wants to live according to Pakistani traditions. The others want the freedom of Western culture. They may feel English, but they look Pakistani, and George fears that the culture they want will never accept them. His neighbors support a politician named Enoch Powell who is calling for repatriation of foreigners. But George and the neighbor do not know that their children are romantically involved.
V**A
Brilliant film of my youth
Set in Salford in the late 70's this film illustrates the agony of hopes and desires that crash and collide as cultures meet, mix and settle. How then with some understanding and basic human kindness we can learn how to appreciate and respect each other. Written by Ayub Khan-Din it's a real chunk of history. The film was directed by Damien O'Donnell and sometimes painfully funny -- everyone should watch it, age 15 up.
D**H
Funny, good period setting
Loved the way it deals with religious and cultural differences in the ongoing friendship between 3 boys who become men. Also deals with the difficulties that come with crossing culture and somehow manages a very real step back in time to the period it is set in, one that I saw first-hand. Quite brilliant really.
E**B
pulls no punches - spares no blushes
Distinctively British, hard hitting comedy about the clash between cultural values and expectations in a large working class mixed English-Pakistani family growing up in a northern industrial town in the early 1970s. Very funny and very thought provoking. Although this film was only made twenty years ago - I fear that such a brutally honest exploration of its difficult but important themes could not be made now (2019) - given current hyper-sensitivity around issues of race, culture, ethnicity and religion in the UK. Speaking as a dad in a British mixed-ethnic/race family - I think that is a shame.
J**D
Great Film
Watched this film when first released but my husband and I watched with our 13 year old daughter. Whilst some scenes where embarrassing for her (sex scene - reminded us both of when we watched tv with our parents). The film is funny, sad, hard hitting and a blooming great watch.
A**3
POOR QUALITY
the DVD arrived on time and the box was in fair condition although not good.The film its self was of poor quality, it kept stuttering and some of the scenes were that dark you couldn't see what was happening.it totally ruined it for usI don't recommend this to anyone
A**R
true to life
this film brought me back to how iy used to be in the 70s, some might take offence but thats how it was. very funny and very enjoyable
S**R
North to north
Never fails to make me chuckle....My fave bit has got to be the flying fanny art
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