Manchester in 1971 is the setting for Damien O'Donnell's dark, irreverent
comedy starring Om Puri (My Son the Fanatic) as George Khan, the grizzly
patriarch of a family beset by cultural dissonance. With six sons and one
daughter, George and his English wife (the wonderful Linda Bassett) work long
hours in their chip shop, and they journey weekly to the mosque in a Pakistani
neighborhood. The film opens as eldest son Nazir runs out on his wedding. In
Fiddler on the Roof fashion, each succeeding son flagrantly rejects
tradition. Abdul tries to placate his father, but he too fears an arranged
marriage. Tariq, who calls himself Tony, sneaks out to discos at night and
sleeps with Stella, a bit of working-class crumpet. Saleem is an engineering
student with artist pretensions. Maneer hides his half-breed shame in Muslim
devotion. Salid is an awkward pre-teen; tomboy Meenah shocks merely by wearing
her short-skirted school uniform. The local Manchester youth run around like
extras from Velvet Goldmine, and George's horny sons are ripe for the
plucking.
Despite an unfortunate sentimental dive in the final 10 minutes, East Is
East is full of comic brilliance. Puri's George bounces between stereotype
and subtlety. His use of the word "bastard," like the movie itself, is a
guaranteed laugh.
--Peg Aloi
Interviews
East is East 
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