Review: My Melbourne, A Memorable  Journey Into The Migrant’s Experience


131
131 points
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My  Melbourne, A Memorable  Journey Into The Migrant’s Experience

Rating: ****

 Four prominent directors get together to weave  a pastiche of pain and reconciliation . The stories  are told with a  compelling clarity and cohesion, and we come away from them  enriched,perhaps wiser without being told how to live our lives. The  tone  of storytelling  in every segment is never preachy,always gentle(even when emotional or physical violence is involved) and beseeching, as thought to tell us that even when life sucks—as it often does—there is  always a  way out.So never despair.

  Significantly, each segment is named after a woman. In the first segment Nandini(the name of  a  character who is  already dead when the story begins) a father travels  from Kolkata to  Melbourne after  his wife’s death to make peace with his gay son Indraneel(played by a  striking Bangladeshi-Australian  actor Arka Das). Director Onir shows a strong grip on his characters even as they wrestle  with their inner demons, the surface tension is  tempered . This is the  calm AFTER the storm,  and what a serene sensitive place to be in! If God lies in  the details, then this one is  a mythological:  Indraneel wiping away his nailpolish in respect for his father’s presence, the tears  beneath the surface, Indraneel’s partner Chris(Jackson Gallagher)’s genuine  efforts to make conservation with Indraneel’s Dad(who insists Chris is  a doctor and not a  nurse,since  in his mindset men and nursing don’t go together)…Incidentally the one bedroom moment between Indraneel and Chris is the best depiction of gay intimacy seen in a film with Indian characters.

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 The second segment of the anthology Jules, directed by Arif Ali(with “creative” direction by his  brother Imtiaz, whatever  that means) is  the  only one  of the quartet of stories  with a negative  abusive  character. He is our heroine  Sakshi’s  bullying husband and, significantly, we never  see his face  in the entire film: there is no place in this celebration of migratory life  for party-poopers. Sakshi an unstoppable dream chaser, a  wannabe chef,she  is waiting tables , assisting her  kind chef(Jake Ryan) hoping to be one  of those some day. In the meantime she has a homeless cranky old woman Jules(Kat Stewart) to deal with .The frisson and the empathy inherent in the story is ably  handled. Arushi Sharma in the central role is charming and committed to her character. The rest of the cast is buoyant and supportive.

 The other two stories are locked at the hips by a common factor:  in both the real-life  character plays her screen version. In Rima Das’ Emma, Ryana Sky delivers  a touching graceful performance  as a hearing impaired  ballet dancer facing  imminent  blindness, struggling to remain afloat in a world that is progressively  letting her ambitions slide through the cracks. There is no selfpity here, only a determination to keep pushing ahead from the end  of the queue. Rima Das fills Emma’s world with  kindness and empathy. And there is the  Indian sunshine  boy Jai(Jordan Sharma) who dances around her like a flighty flirtatious butterfly….This segment catches  a lot of Melbourne’s  exteriors in  happy moments.

  Finally—and I wished it wouldn’t end—there is Setara, the story of an Afghani  cricketer in Melbourne who will chase her dream without dropping her hijab. There is an abundance of  warmth and tenderness in this Kabir Khan-directed story too. The title role is  taken over by Setara Amiri as though  she owns it(which she does) .Setara land of escape  Australia is  a dream come true. She  is surrounded by people who want her to excel. I especially liked the  genuine warmth of  Brad Hodge as Setara’s coach.Ella Wilson as Setara’s sister is also very convincing…

  But then  who is not? No one can afford to be  a posteurer in this all-heart-no-pretence anthology about people in transition lunging towards their dreams with  both their hands. Kudos to producer Mitu Bhowmick Lange for giving shape to intangible hopes.