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THIS WEEK AT THE MOVIES

 

Provoked

Directed by
Raj Mundrha

Rating: (3.0)
ERIC'S STAR RATINGS

Review:
Provoked - A True StoryRaj Mundrha is unknown in this country, well that is to mainstream movies.
The reason is that for the most part he does pornography, which, while profitable, is ignored by critics because it's, well, porn, and in the age of video and DVD, never gets into theaters.

On occasion, however,
he feels the urge to do something socially responsible, and in this case has done what might be called a glorified movie-of-the-week about spousal abuse with genuine movie stars in it. The results are surprisingly good.

The film begins with Pujabi-Brithish housewife Kirnjit Ahluwalia (Aishwarya
Rai) setting fire to her husband Deepak(Naveen Andrews), who, as we learn in
excruciating detail, would beat the crap out of her all the time during their
ten year marriage.

Admitting that she did it to the police, Kirnjit is given a public defender
named Miriam (Rebecca Pidgeon), who informs her that because even though she
was traumatized by her husband that night, the fact that it was more than two
hours after the final abuse that she tried to kill him, she cannot use
provocation as a defense in the trial, a charge which is raised from assault to first
degree murder when Deepak dies from his burns.

Meanwhile, Kirinjit finds some allies, both expected and unexpected. The
former is her cellmate Veronica Scott(Miranda Richardson), and her posse, and the
latter are the he Southall Black Sisters, a no-profit feminist legal aid
group, run by firebrand Radha Dalal(Nandita Das). With the help of these two,
Kirinjit begins to blossom. But there's still the problem of getting her out of
jail, which means filing an appeal and finding a decent legal reason to make it
stick. So with some surprising help, SBS's solicitor Anil Gupta(Raji James) and
famed barrister Lord Edward Foster (Robbie Coltrane) make legal history.

The film is an inter-cutting of the main story and Kirnjit's flashbacks,
showing how Deepak went from being a sweet, loving husband, to a rotten, thuggish
abuser. While most of the cast are actually reasonably well known to American
audiences [Said from “Lost” for crying out loud], the big surprise is
Aishwarya Rai, who has been mostly in lightweight Bollywood productions which never
get real release in the US. She's really good.

As I said at the beginning, this is just a glorified movie of the week, with
the usual female empowerment feel-good plot with the standard happy ending.
However, it is professionally done, and should be worth a look when it arrives
on cable or Netflix.
Eric Lurio

 

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