Mississippi Masala (1991) Poster

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8/10
A true depiction of Indians in America.
corrupt20018 February 2005
This movie showed one thing that is totally true about many Indians in America (I don't know about England). Many Indians who immigrate to this country start acting and behaving like they are white. Sometimes they forget that they are not even white (I am guilty of that sometimes too, probably even more because I grew up here). Denzel Washington points that out to Roshan Seth very well in this movie. "You are no more than a few shades from my complexion." And then Jammu point out to Anil how he has started to act American (probably means white American), and Anil says, "So what? I'm living in America! You don't like it? Go back to India!"

Overall, it's a really good movie. I like it even more than "Monsoon Wedding," and I feel this movie was very underrated. My seventh grade teacher recommended this movie a long time ago (actually a few mos. after I saw it myself.) I myself have been recommending it to some of my non-Indian college friends who have seen Monsoon Wedding.
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7/10
A good romance picture with great lead actors
NewEnglandPat26 June 2005
The theme of interracial romance is the setting for this fine drama and focus on the divisions between black Americans and South Asian communities. Denzel Washington and Sarita Choudhury are appealing as the central figures from different backgrounds and struggle to stay together amid the controversy that swirls around them. Washington and Choudhury have a nice chemistry that works very well in this picture and makes their romance even more believable. They have their share of ups and downs and face challenges to their relationship like any normal couple. The movie touches on the origins of the immigrant status of the South Asians which began when they were expelled from Uganda many years earlier. The resentment towards blacks is a recurring theme in the movie as they settle into their new communities in the deep south. The film has a bouncy music score that adds flavor to the story and a nice cast weaves everything together in fine style.
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7/10
Interracial romance in the south
rosscinema19 April 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This is an intimate look at Indians from Africa in America that are just trying to do the best they can and still maintain their values and it was made into a film when the director discovered that many of the motels in the south are owned by Indians. Story is about an Indian family that was ousted from Uganda in the early 70's when Idi Amin started to kick out all Asians. Jay (Roshan Seth) was a lawyer in Africa but had to take his wife Kinnu (Sharmila Tagore) and his young daughter Mina out of the country and would end up in Greenwood, Mississippi. Years later Mina (Sarita Choudhury) who is 24 still lives with her parents who run a motel and they expect her to marry an Indian gentleman. One day Mina is involved in a traffic accident and meets a young black man named Demetrius (Denzel Washington) and after exchanging address's he asks her out on a date. They start to date but keep it secret from her parents until they are caught by fellow Indians.

*****SPOILER ALERT*****

Demetrius owns a carpet cleaning business and many of his clients are the Indian motel owners and when word spreads of their relationship his business starts to go downhill which puts him in trouble with the bank. Mina loves Demetrius but he is seriously hurt by the reaction of not only the Indians in the community but of her parents.

This film was directed by Mira Nair who has added so much to films with her poignant views of Indian culture trying to survive in America and she had made a big impact with her first feature "Salaam Bombay!" and would later make the splendid "Monsoon Wedding". One of the interesting things about this story is that we get to see why this family had to come to America instead of just having the film start with them already in Mississippi. While this is an interesting and provocative script what lies at the core of this film is a simple love story that is relevant to this day. Washington was just emerging as an important actor and he's solid as usual but the film's star is really by newcomer Choudhury. This was her first role and even though at times she appears nervous she turns in a very good performance. It cannot be easy to be in your first film and have nude scenes but she evidently came through alright and shows enough freshness and charm to practically steal the film. Film goes on a tad long and the last 20 minutes seem obvious but this is an intriguing story and Nair is an important director who has again shown her observances of transplanted Indians in America.
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Pretty good movie about overcoming prejudice.
TxMike23 December 2001
Warning: Spoilers
"Mississippi Masala" stars Denzel Washington, before he became known with such films as "Malcolm X". But this is not about blacks in Mississippi. It is about Indians ("no, not that kind of Indian") being expelled from their East African homeland, and taking 15+ years to make peace with it. Along the way the father had become estranged from his best friend from childhood, a very black African, and found when he finally returned to Uganda that his friend had died.

When the family was forced to leave Uganda in the mid-70s, they went to England then ended up in Miss., living in and running a motel. Pretty typical. The daughter, Mina, was 24 and still treated like she was 16. In a small traffic accident, she met Demetrius (Denzel) who had a business cleaning carpets. They clicked, began to go places together, fell for each other, the spit hit the fan in Biloxi when they were in a motel room together. When mom and dad went back to Uganda, Mina stayed in Miss., with Demetrius.

The whole point of the film was how the Indians built up this hatred for people "of color" because of what had happened to them, and their healing was complete only after they returned to their homeland. Pretty good film, develops slowly, but interesting all the way.
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7/10
not the best work by Mira Nair but fair enough
ankitkb899 November 2012
After having seen 'Monsoon wedding' and 'Fire' by Mira Nair, I would rate this movie just above average by her standards and lacks the 'wow' factor which makes Nair's movies interesting. The movie basically revolves around an Indian girl who falls in love with a black guy which is not only acceptable to her family but to entire Indian community living the locality.The story might hold you for the entire length of the movie but does not leave any impact at the end. Performances by Sarita Choudhary and Denzel Washington are very good. Even Rohan Seth has done a great job in acting. Rest of the actors were below par, but I was most disappointed by Sharmila Tagore from whom I had expected a far better performance. A mere one time watch movie!!
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9/10
One of the most interesting movies I've seen.
dreaddy214 October 2001
When Mississippi Masala opened it was a B movie or was treated as such. Denzil Washington was riding high with his Malcolm X role in the news. I wondered what made him decide on such a low key movie. I got hold of the cassette and saw it. Then I knew why. The plot is excellent and this must have been the reason why other notable actors (Charles Dutton comes to mind; and the actors who played Meena's Father (Rohan Seth, I think, who came in Gandhi), and the actor who played Denzil's father. The other actors were magnificent and were perfect for their parts. I particular enjoyed Sunil and friends and Denzil's brother.

What was most admirable in this movie is the writer/director's ability to merge three cultures (Uganda, India, & Southern USA) into an enchanting love story. Mira Nir has made her mark with this movie. Not surprising the critics loved it.

I New York the movie opened quietly then quickly became popular by word-of-mouth. Many women went to see Denzil but came away enjoying a unique and interesting love story with racism from another angle as it's strong undertone. Go see it if you haven't already.
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7/10
Authentic, funny, good script
dacunha29 December 2003
I first saw this movie in 1993 and was struck by its authenticity, particularly the scenes set in Uganda. The dialog captures the way we Uganda Asians speak and the theme of racism is also one we are familiar with. One line in the movie captures this better than any other "My dear, she can be dark and rich or she can be fair and poor but she can't be dark and poor and expect to marry someone like Hari Kumar". The theme of embedded racism in Indian society hadn't been tackled as well this in English-language movies before. ("East is East" and "Bend It Like Beckam" and countless others have since touched on this.) So for a good, entertaining script and a funny and accurate portrayal of Ugandans in exile, I give this movie 7 out of 10. Some of the acting was not up to the standard of the script and the central love story was not engaging enough. If you've enjoyed "East is East", etc, you'll enjoy this one.
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9/10
Mississippi Masala is a very deep movie with deep actors
dunlap274064 January 2007
I love this movie. I first saw it as a preteen and did not understand the concept. I have recently got the DVD as a gift and watch it over and over again and learn something else from it each time. Sarita Choudhury is one of the best actresses of our time and I respect her decision to not want to go "Hollywood". She has appeared in movies with substance and a message unlike the movies that are coming out in mainstream Hollywood. Denzel Washington is a great actor in this movie as well. Playing Demitrius, you really see his versatility as an actor. Mississippi Masala touches a new kind of racism not shown in movies before. Dark skin vs. light skin seems to go across every ethnicity in the world and I respect Mira Nair for making this film. Although the movie or its actors didn't receive the attention or awards (i.e. an Oscar) for their extraordinary performance, this is a must see movie and it will change your mind about the caliber of movies you choose to see from now on.
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6/10
Two Stories: One Strong, One Weak in Masala
pc9523 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Mississippi Masala is a little bit difficult to rate. It's a bit dated now, but still has enough going for it that it is fairly good film. (spoilers) Between the 2 stories, the main love affair and secondary moving away from home and memories, I found the Uganda foundation story with memories to be quite good and absorbing, while the love interest poorly written and conceived. The movie does pretty well until it tries to conjure up conflict based on racial friction - this is where the dialog starts to break down. Dialog starts to include subjects like "you people" and other generalizations. The characters especially Demetrius and Mina lack what should be clarity to cut through the tension - and that's the problem. It's too contrived. I thought the acting was mostly good. You can tell it's Choudhury's first big movie or part. Roshan Seth commands all the scenes he's in. The ending was well done, and the secondary plot magnificently completed. It's enough to encourage watching the movie just for that part of it
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5/10
Not bad, but it could have been a bit better had the plot been a bit less shallow.
planktonrules29 October 2011
This film begins in the early 1970s in Uganda. Idi Amin, the insane dictator, has just announced that all non-blacks must leave the country. So, a young Meena and her parents are forced to leave the only place they've ever lived. While they are Africans, their heritage is Indian.

The film picks up two decades later. The family now lives in Mississippi of all places--in a small Indian community. They work for an Indian-owned motel. Meena (Sarita Choudhury) meets a nice young black man, Demetrius (Denzel Washington). And, after dating a very short time, they sleep together...and are discovered by her relatives. The family is incensed--presumably because Demetrius is black. And, lots of chaos and repercussions occur.

My feeling is that the script missed the point a bit. While only idiots might be angry at the interracial angle, I guess I'm old fashioned and can see the family getting upset that Meena is spreading her legs after only two dates. In movies, this is a good thing--in real life, pregnancy and STDs might be the result. So, had Meena and Demetrius had a deeper connection before they were discovered, the film would have made a lot more sense--and the conflict would have been much more interesting. As it is, the relationship between Meena and Demetrius is unconvincing and makes little sense. And, speaking of that, the film ends very, very, very abruptly and left me feeling very flat. Overall, a film with some real possibilities but that just didn't come together well. A bit of a disappointment.
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10/10
one of those movies that you don't usually expect
lee_eisenberg12 June 2005
In the early 20th century, the English government moved several people from India to Uganda to build the railroad. Some of the Indians stayed and became lawyers, physicians, etc. When Idi Amin came to power in the early 1970s, he expelled all non-black Africans. Some of the Indians moved to Mississippi and began running motels.

"Mississippi Masala" focuses on this. Mina (Sarita Choudhury) is the daughter of an Indian family who fled Uganda for Mississippi. She develops a relationship with Demetrius (Denzel Washington), a local man. Her family does not approve of her dating a black man, and Demetrius' friends don't like him dating an Indian woman.

The movie shows many things, in particular how both the blacks and the Indians were displaced from their ancestral lands. Also, it shows how the blacks are racist towards the Indians and vice versa. As Demetrius reminds Mina's father: "Your skin is just a couple of shades from mine." Regardless of whether or not these sorts of things happen a lot, the movie does a very good job with it all.
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7/10
Different spices need to blend together
rollernerd19 April 2021
Welcome to another edition of Adam's Movie Reviews!! **queue in intro music**

Tonight's movie is the romantic drama Mississippi Masala (1991) which starts off with a young family with Indian heritage are forced out of Uganda, Africa in the early 70's. This was due to the dictatorship of Idi Amin who literally kicked out all the Asians from Africa - mind you these Asians (mostly Indians) were relocated into Africa to slave away with building the train rail ways. So fast forward to the 90s's and the young little girl in that family that fled to Mississippi, USA is now a young Indian motel-worker Mina who literally crashes into an African-American carpet cleaner Demetrius played by my man Denzel Washington...the reason why I have outlined the background of these two characters who fall for each other is due to the fact that they are labelled in that way throughout the entire movie. The director is smart enough to build up a cultural dislocation straight away which has become a tradition of both the families which the main characters are a part of.

So, two lovers fall for each - interracial love...which again is played cleverly by the filmmakers where masala is literally a mixture of coloured spices which is a reflection on the characters in this movie - they are individuals who make up separate worlds in society which is represented through Mina and Demetrius. Their romance leads to many topics including racial prejudice and colour-blind between different group of society who do not like change and differences within their own ties of tradition. The characters' love is soon revealed which instantly spirals into losing the respect of their communities and families. The film's story was tackled in a smart manner. The way the director used music, language and culture whether channelled through family events or on a street corner stereotypes each background's similarity - they have no curiosity about groups outside their own social circles. Another similarity that is shown in the movie is both main groups were displaced from their ancestral lands yet even though these groups were victims of racial prejudice each group regardless of background tend to follow this path by looking down on each other based on the colour of skin. The director does very well to demonstrate this throughout the film in a realistic way without losing focus on the romance between the two main characters.

My only criticism is this film has too many things going on including whether the story is about leaving Uganda and returning to Uganda, the story of living in the south of America, a love story, a father's responsibility to his only daughter and the failings of groups from different backgrounds. Due to this it misses out what the movie is really about - different spices that need to blend together. Another flaw is the way the beginning was shot and the flashbacks...it would have been good if this was clear at the beginning. It is still however funny and enthralling to watch and it captivate what is to happen to the doomed romance between Mina and Demetrius. Great performances by all and a great chemistry match between Denzel and his counterpart Sarita Choudhury who plays Mina. This film is a hidden gem that is definitely overlooked and is worth to be watched. Overall 7.2/10.
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2/10
"What about me?"
ssav8614 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I have to disagree with the other comments. I think that this movie is entirely in your face when it comes to race relations. One would think that all African Americans and Indians talked about was how they were not white. I also found the protagonists to be selfish and annoying. One would think if Mina's clichéd "what about me's" didn't get on people's' nerves, then her general disrespectful attitude and nastiness would. I found Demetrius to be disrespectful as well. Mina's family was upset with him because of his skin color? Maybe, just maybe it was the fact that they caught him having sex with her daughter - and yes, call me a curmudgeon, but I think I agree with traditional Indian culture, which seems to be against having sex after a couple of dates. Maybe I'm just not liberated enough!

In general, the plot unfolded slowly, and besides the assisine dialogues, much of it just didn't click. Why, for example, if he was such a swell guy, as the movie tries to present him, would Demetrius hit on Mina when Harry was right there in the first place? Denzel is of course a great actor, but they just didn't write for him here. The only appealing aspect of this movie was the father and his story.
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Surreal Asian/ African Love Story
AvinashPatalay20 June 2009
After Salaam Bombay expectations run high with the next outing being "Mississippi Masala" for Mira Nair. And in all honesty "Mississippi Masala" has a soul in itself. There are many layers in the movie which are subtly dealt with and handled succinctly. For starters the plot predominantly centred around Indian family one would expect the usual "laugh-at-me" tracks and should admit it doesn't succumb to it. It's neither taking mickey out of the Black community. Both the sides of the coin are impartially moderated. The director deserves kudos for efficiently managing to do the tight-rope walking.

Sarita Chowdhary:: Essentially the movie is woman-centric and hence she gets the meaty-pie. Has various shades to her role and Sarita seem to be at ease in the garb of Meena. As rightly justified in the movie, she could be easily mistaken for a Mexican. And Mira Nair does portray her "Mistress of Spices" quite well.

Denzel Washington:: His performance surely makes you feel that he delivers goods that is class-apart. The writing should take the blame for any shortcoming on developing his character otherwise he is nothing short of cent percent.

Roshan Seth:: For some reason, I was constantly getting the feeling that I am watching a character who is masked under Naseeruddin Shah. Perhaps the role was written for Naseer in the first place. And yes, Roshan Seth gets the diction spot on.

Sharmila:: Doesn't get much but she is good in her own right.

The other Bollywood crew lend adequate support (Mohan Gokhale, Mohan Agashe & Anjan Srivastava).

Music by L. Subramaniam neatly blends with the narration.

The only part which deserved better writing was the way the lead characters meet and start to like each other which I would safely say is a minor aberration which can be ignored.

Nonetheless, its a good watch.
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7/10
Made me wanna visit Uganda and India again.
scott_filtenborg28 December 2020
I watched the movie first time in a movie theater in downtown Nairobi in April 1992. As I couldn't make it to Uganda then, I was glad to see it on screen. I visited Uganda in 1999 and it was the friendliest country I'd been to in Africa as well as the safest Sub-Saharan country. Such a change from Amin's days. But then I was there again in 2008 and I couldn't say anything positive. Things do change constantly on the continent. I enjoyed watching it third time on Denzel's 66th birthday. It's a great story with depth. I enjoyed the scenes from Kampala as I walked around a lot. Even though it's a movie, I've watched before, I felt a relief when the airplane took off from Entebbe to safety. I could stop biting my nails. I gave the movie an extra star from last time.
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7/10
Denzel overcomes any weakness from Sarita
SnoopyStyle25 April 2015
In 1972, Idi Amin takes power in Uganda and expels all Asians. Jay (Roshan Seth) is heartbroken to leave his homeland. He takes his wife Kinnu and daughter Meena ultimately to Greenwood, Mississippi. Flash forward to 1990, Meena (Sarita Choudhury) is a rebellious teen and crashes her car into Demetrius Williams (Denzel Washington). Jay is still trying to return to his home in Uganda. The family lives at the motel owned by the extended family. Demetrius is a responsible working guy unlike his brothers. Demetrius and Meena start a relationship raising objections from her family.

Washington is terrific as always. Choudhury is not as great and the imbalance makes the romance a little wonky. It's probably my one and only complaint. The race relationships from a different point of view is compelling. Jay is a really interesting character with a fascinating story. This romance is definitely something out of the ordinary unlike most Hollywood movies.
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9/10
Many stories braided together
neelvk17 July 2002
Some may think that all it is about is the race relations between Asian Indians and Blacks in Southern USA. I saw it as collection of stories, each running along its own thread while impacting others at the same time. There is a love story between a Black guy and an Asian Indian (by way of Africa) girl, there is a man trying to regain his lost homeland (which some may consider artificial), there are others who are trying to fit into the new-new-South, a younger brother who is a bother and a motel owner who doesn't understand the people around him. All in all, a well knit story.
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7/10
Cinema Omnivore - Mississippi Masala (1991) 7.3/10
lasttimeisaw2 January 2023
"Mina and Demetrius's interracial relationship is presented as an organic affair that does not eschew from erotic feelings apropos of their budding desire - Washington is in one of his most demonstratively sensual moments during the arousing phone-talk scenes, or its debit side, like Demetrius's initial interest in Mina is to piss off his old flame and he is reasonably tentative to take the romance seriously, it is all credited to Mina's go-getter spirit that the pair might have a future together. Also cultural assimilation is portrayed here as something knottier than sustaining one's roots and background, one must venture out of their own community to find a deep, universal connection among their countryfolk."

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6/10
Worth Watching
slightlymad2216 August 2023
Continuing my plan to watch every movie in Denzel Washington's filmography I come to 1991's Mississippi Masala

The light hearted tone of the trailer does not convey the seriousness of the movie, at all. It's very serious.

I wouldn't say this is a good movie per se, but it is an interesting one and Denzel is always a good watch and he has decent chemistry with Sarita Choudhury, in her first movie. It's a movie that deserves to be seen.

Mississippi Masala was another bust at the box office, when it was finally released in 1992. It only made $7 million dollars and was the years 104th highest grossing movie of the year.

I watched the full movie on Youtube, I recommend checking it out.
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5/10
could have used a little more spice
mjneu598 December 2010
After making a splash with her debut feature 'Salaam Bombay', director Mira Nair tried to attract a wider audience with this strictly conventional (if pleasantly untraditional) cross-cultural romance. Denzel Washington plays a small town Mississippi janitor who charms (and is charmed by) the liberated daughter of an Indian political activist exiled from Idi Amin's Uganda. The conflicts between father and daughter are in fact more involving than the star-crossed love affair, and while it hardly follows any standard romantic formula there's still a discouraging sense of compromise to the film, in which likable but underwritten characters trade weak dialogue sounding all too often like the result of a bad translation. The cast is certainly attractive (if a little lopsided: Denzel Washington completely outclasses his co-stars), and the production is marked by a welcome lack of Hollywood gloss, most likely due to an unwelcome lack of a Hollywood budget. But in the end the film provides only a modest spark in an otherwise dim movie-going season.
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10/10
A fine, perceptive, very human film
cndiver6 March 2005
that explores, opens up, reveals the unconscious, socially conditioned ways we limit ourselves. Because the film deals primarily with the Black and African-Indian communities, I found myself wishing that I could have seen it in a Black/Indian audience to see what the film stirred up!

This is a good film for those of you who like explosions, cool mafia hit men, and high tech because it is about real human difficulty and real courage -- not the Die Hard and Terminator fantasy versions of those virtues.

It also happens to be a very sweet, often tellingly funny love story about two believable people you will end up really liking.
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6/10
Needed Some Spice, But Still a Tasty Meal Cuz Mr. Denzel Washington 🐐
mohnomachado20 July 2023
Would you run away for love? From your past, your friends, your family... where is your home? The land you were born in, or the land you discover when forging a new bond?

When the film ventures to scenes centered around these topics, I was really enjoying it. However, when "Mississippi Masala" focuses on the plot of Denzel falling for an Indian/Ugandan woman in Mississippi and the dramatic heft of the film relies on people not accepting them together, I was a little bored. I think it's wonderful to look at, yet there were times where the sets seemed a little baron due to budget constraints. I have to give the director Mira Nair credit for nailing the exterior and dancing scenes with vast wide shots and wonderfully intimate close ups during dramatic peaks.

If you like romantic movies, this one could be for you, mainly due to the fact that the two leads do have good chemistry. Denzel is hard not to feel slightly charmed by in any project he's in and Sarita Choudary handles the romantic scenes with finesse. I would have liked to have seen more from her emotionally during her fight with her parents and other moments, but that could just be a credit to how good her parents were in this. Overall, a tame romance movie more focused on the racial divisions than the intimacy of an everlasting love.
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5/10
One thing spoiled what could have been a pretty good movie
Vash_ebas3 August 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Mira Nair is one of the best directors. Her movies are different and deep. I liked the concept behind this movie. It addresses prejudices in different cultures. This should have been a really good movie. It wasn't. What spoiled the movie for me was the choice of the female lead. Sarita Chowdhary could not possibly pass as the daughter of the two parents on the screen (played by Sharmila Tagore who was one of the top actresses of her era in Bollywood, and Roshan Seth). If you see their features, they are angular. Sarita has a completely different face- thick lips, flat nose, rectangular face, darker skin than both parents. She did not even look like an Indian. That killed the whole racial difference theme of the movie.

In the beginning we see a young Meena about 9 years old, in tears when her parents decide to leave Uganda. They were basically forced to leave their home and their belongings behind. What was most painful to all three of them was losing their Ugandan friends. Meena loved her African friends, and it is not surprising that she is attracted to an African American after moving to the USA, much to the chagrin of the resident Indians.

The end was touching, however, and lifted the movie quite a bit. When the father goes back to Uganda, which he considers his true home, and feels love toward an African baby, he realizes that color does not matter. That was the high point of the movie. He also realizes that his past home is no longer his home. So the beginning and the end of the movie are good. The in betweens are not as strong.

The accent was an issue. If Meena (Sarita Chowdhary) spent several years in Uganda, then UK, before moving to the USA, why did she not have some British accent? The parents accents were Indian. If the father was born in Uganda, he should have had a different accent (not Indian).

It's not clear what profession the father had in Uganda, why he chose Mississippi and not one of the northern states, why the daughter was uneducated. The lack of education is very un-Indian. Culturally Indians (even those who live in other countries) place very high value on education.

There are too many deficiencies in the body of the movie, and for me watching Sarita Chowdhary as Sharmila Tagore's daughter was just too much. She spoiled the whole movie for me. It was too unrealistic, despite a very good idea behind the movie.
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Star Crossed lovers head south
Philby-321 July 2002
Warning: Spoilers
CAUTION: MILD SPOILER:

There's been a rash of multi-ethnic `feelgood movies in the last year or so – `What's Cooking' and `Bend it like Beckham' from Gurinda Chadha, and `Monsoon Wedding' from the director of this film, Mira Nair. Another not-so-feelgood movie about ethnic conflict was `Earth', from Deepa Mehta, which dealt with the aftermath of the partition of the Punjab along the Radcliffe Line in 1947.

This film however, made 10 years ago, highlights neither comedy nor disaster; it is really a light romantic drama of the Romeo and Juliet type. One of the lovers, young Afro-American Demetrius, (Denzel Washington), is not even particularly likeable, grim, humourless, focused on getting ahead in his cleaning business. The other, East Indian Mina (Sarita Choudhury), is gorgeous, sexy and at a loose end – trouble about to happen, in fact. They meet literally by accident. She runs a borrowed `Pimpmobile' (a pink 70s Lincoln convertible) into the back of his van, and he initially uses her in an unsuccessful attempt to make a former girlfriend jealous. Soon, however, the hormones come into their own, and we are treated to some tasteful but erotic sex.

As always in such movies, true love prevails, but not until there occurs a series of escapades demonstrating that there is plenty of bigotry on both sides, even from people who are scarcely aware that there are Indians other than the North American indigenous ones. Once the affair is revealed, both families condemn it, business dries up, and even the white-owned bank is quick to call up Demetrius' loan. Why some people still find interracial sexual relationships distasteful can no doubt be traced to early conditioning, but the lovers are also up against envy and their family's conventional expectations.

A parallel story here is Mina's lawyer father's quest to get back the property in Uganda he had to abandon when the dictator Idi Amin expelled the Asian minority in 1973. Born in Uganda, Jay (Roshan Seth – also the father in `Monsoon Wedding') has never accepted his loss and accepted the challenge of the new country, while his less well educated relatives have got themselves established as small business entrepreneurs in motels. (His wife supports the family by running a liquor shop.) Only at the end of the film, when he finally returns to Kampala, does he realise that, despite the emotional pull, there's no going back to the past.

Your correspondent drove through the southern Mississippi setting for this movie in October 2000 (even lunching in Biloxi, the location for Demetrius and Mina's naughty weekend) and can vouch for the authenticity of the locations and the grip East African Asians have on the hotel business there, though it seems Biloxi itself has fallen victim to some big casino developments since 1991. It's easy to see why the Asians have done well– the motels might not be luxurious but they are clean, friendly and the level of service is high. Demetrius and Mina probably face a fairly mundane future, perhaps behind the counter of such a place, but it will be their choice, not their family's, and who knows where their children might venture to.
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7/10
Only shades of difference but worlds apart
view_and_review28 August 2018
This was a layered, intricate movie dealing with race, culture, and love--three very nebulous and delicate issues.

In 1972 Idi Amin expelled all Asians from Uganda. Those Asians were primarily Indian. This sent Jay (Seth Roshan) and his family packing and on a journey that eventually landed them in Greenwood, Mississippi. It was there that his daughter, Mina (Sarita Choudhury) met and fell in love with Demetrius (Denzel Washington).

Even though this love was not between black and white it was still between people of different races and even more different cultures. The disapproval of their relationship was just as severe as if they had been a black man and a white woman in Mississippi.

Their relationship was under intense strain. Mississippi Masala stressed that Indians are fiercely protective of their culture and very homogenous. Demetrius just saw another group of people hating him for his skin color. The matter was so delicate because their relationship resulted in tangible consequences. So the question becomes: is it worth it?

I'm sure many people from many disparate cultures in many lands have had to ask and answer the same question: is it worth it? It is a very difficult question to answer and it sucks that it has to even be asked, but it does. Love is strong but how much suffering is a person willing to endure for the sake of love? And I don't mean taking a bullet, or braving some insults, or putting up with some annoying quirks. I'm talking ostracism and isolation from those you've known and loved your whole life. I'm talking poverty and itinerancy due to your forbidden partner. Maybe some can bear it but certainly there are others who cannot. In their own creative way writer, Sooni Taraporevala, and director, Mira Nair, make you think about it.
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