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    You are at:Home»Features»Cinema»Review: The Big Sick – Rom-Com Across Cultures

    Review: The Big Sick – Rom-Com Across Cultures

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    By Lavina Melwani on June 24, 2017 Cinema
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     Kumail Nanjiani and Zoe Kazan in 'The Big Sick'
    Kumail Nanjiani and Zoe Kazan in ‘The Big Sick’

     

    The Big Sick – Rom-Com Across Cultures

    [dropcap]‘T[/dropcap]he Big Sick’ is a story for our times and what makes it kind of cool is that it’s a real life story – it actually happened and is not the figment of someone’s imagination.  Yes, immigration, love, breakup and marriage, sickness and coma, terrorism and multiculturalism all come into it but it’s always upbeat, always funny. Big ambitious topics for a sweet little romantic tale but  ‘The Big Sick’ pulls it off.

    The very appealing Kumail Nanjiani (it says a lot about a changing America that our new comedians don’t feel compelled to change their first or last names to shorter more Americanized ones) and the equally winsome Zoe Kazan, along with a stellar cast of actors including Holly Hunter, Ray Romano and Anupam Kher create a very believable and very American tale, of life the way it is today.

     

    [dropcap]T[/dropcap]he story is simple and charming enough – Kumail (playing himself), a full-time Pakistani-American stand-up comic and part-time Uber driver falls in love with Emily (Zoe Kazan) a grad student he meets at a comedy club. Love across cultures is never easy though it has a lot of great moments especially made for comedy. Kumail is hiding the existence of his white girlfriend from his Pakistani family while compelled to see a lot of prospective arranged Pakistani brides to appease his parents. Things get complicated when Emily comes across his stash of photographs of candidates: “Are you judging Pakistan’s Next Hot Model?”

    There are cultural misunderstandings, heartbreak and a break-up and things get rougher when Emily gets sick – really sick – and is put in a medically induced coma. How the romance survives all this and how her parents played by Holly Hunter and Ray Romano build a bridge with the Pakistani boy-friend they’ve never met is the rest of this surprisingly funny, surprisingly tender  tale.

    The Nanjiani Family at dinner in 'The Big Sick'
    The Nanjiani Family at dinner in ‘The Big Sick’

     

    [dropcap]‘T[/dropcap]he Big Sick’ is a light romance but gets you where it counts because it is such an authentic tale for which the script was co-written by Kumail and his real-life wife, Emily V. Gordon. In the movie, all the actors are superbly cast:   Nanjiani in his first dramatic role and Zoe Kazan make a very natural couple – they both have such an air of vulnerability about them that you can’t help rooting for them. Both sets of parents feel very real, very three-dimensional.  The wonderful Holly Hunter and Ray Romano look as if they’ve walked in from the battlefield of a real marriage. Kumail’s parents are played by the much acclaimed actor Anupam Kher and  Indian-American actress Zenobia Shroff  – and they are just perfect, not at all stereotypical characters.  In fact, Shroff really deserves more roles in Hollywood and Bollywood films for she’s a fine, energetic actor.

    The Big Sick - Ray Romano & Kumail Nanjiani
    The Big Sick – Ray Romano & Kumail Nanjiani

    ‘The Big Sick’ is a comedy but it’s also a wry meditation about relationships, love and family. What you experience is the fierce love and fights of families and how parents continue to care so much for their children who may never realize it or appreciate it. There is the chaos of cultural miscommunications and you also see how a Tupperware container of mutton biryani can be a way of caring when no hugs can be exchanged and no words uttered by an estranged mother.

    The exchanges are always funny and you end up smiling through the film. ‘The Big Sick’ is about different people, different colors, misunderstandings and understandings, about South Asians and Americans creating a life together in a frenetic city. It is a movie about America today, about the ups and downs of life but seen always through the prism of humor.

    Related Reviews:

    The Big Sick – The New York Times

    The Big Sick review – Guardian

    ‘The Big Sick’ Review | Hollywood Reporter

    .The Big Sick (2017) – Rotten Tomatoes

    The Big Sick
    The Big Sick

     

    Lavina Melwani
    • Website

    Lavina Melwani is a New York-based journalist who writes for several international publications. Twitter@lavinamelwani & @lassiwithlavina Sign up for the free newsletter to get your dose of Lassi!

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    4 Comments

    1. Lavina Melwani on June 25, 2017 3:00 pm

      Via Facebook
      Priyanka Sachar via Delhi Bloggers Group

      Ray Romano and anupam kher together! Oh God am I dreaming?! :p

    2. Lavina Melwani on June 25, 2017 2:58 pm

      Via Facebook – Indians in South Florida Group
      Mar Lena

      Great review of what seems to be an even greater movie… thanks!

    3. Lavina Melwani on June 25, 2017 1:58 pm

      Via Facebook
      Zenobia, you were really good and I hope this movie leads to a lot more meaty roles for you!

    4. Lavina Melwani on June 25, 2017 1:56 pm

      Via Facebook
      Zenobia Shroff:
      Lavina Melwani, thank you so much for your kinds words about me in your review

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    Lassi with Lavina is a dhaba-style offering of life and the arts through the prism of India. It shares the celebrations and concerns of the global Indian woman. Supported by the Knight Foundation for Journalism, it brings stories from New York to New Delhi to readers globally. About Lassi with Lavina

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