SummaryA young Pakistani man chasing corporate success on Wall Street finds himself caught between the American Dream, conflicting ideologies, and the enduring call of his family's homeland.
SummaryA young Pakistani man chasing corporate success on Wall Street finds himself caught between the American Dream, conflicting ideologies, and the enduring call of his family's homeland.
The Reluctant Fundamentalist will likely make some people mad because of the way it holds the United States responsible for the repercussions of its actions in the world. Like Changez himself, the film has a complicated relationship with the superpower.
Nair sleekly manages the story’s thriller aspects, especially the kidnapping. But this is a character study, and she has found some superb actors to fill it.
A brilliant film. Deals with issues we too often choose not to talk about. The music, cinematography, performances, and storyline are all top notch. A true return to form for Mira Nair!
I was a bit 'reluctant' to watch this movie as I was aware that the plot had been expanded into a thriller, but I was pleasantly surprised. Instead of feeling let down every time there was a change from the novel, I found myself growing in anticipation as the series of events set in motion following the kidnapping of the American professor unfolded. Riz Ahmed turns out a stellar performance as the protagonist.
Though Nair leaves us guessing as to Changez’s motivations, she also uses a pretty heavy hand in laying out the movie’s themes. The changes between the novel and the screenplay are equally unsubtle, especially in regards to the ill-conceived romance.
Mira Nair has crafted a handsome but clubfooted film that lurches through predictable hot spots. It most disappoints as a thriller, the flashbacks and voiceovers and romantic entanglements so dominating the proceedings you forget that someone is bound and gagged in real time.
Mira Nair’s latest immigrant saga saddles itself with a laborious narrative structure and half-baked thriller elements in a misguided attempt to open up what should be an intimate, introspective story.
The movie's failures are all the more unfortunate because they detract from its central and conspicuous success, the performance of Riz Ahmed in the title role. Mr. Ahmed turns the quicksilver quality of the book's internal monologue into a tour de force of his own creation. He's a bright star in a dim constellation.
A young Pakistani man (Riz Ahmed) comes to college in the US and stays to become a successful financial analyst. Events after 9/11 complicate his allegiance to both countries, while a hostage crisis back home provides the fulcrum between his past and the present political strife. There are some names in the cast (Kate Hudson, Kiefer Sutherland, Liev Schreiber), but it's Ahmed's charisma and complex performance that makes this film so effective. It also helps that an accomplished director (Mira Nair) is at the helm. She has crafted a quietly suspenseful and completely involving political drama.
“I love America,” says Changez Khan (Riz Ahmed), the conflicted hero of Mira Nair’s outsider love story The Reluctant Fundamentalist. But does he really? Changez whose very name encloses the many layers of irony that the movie peels back with the greedy appetite of a thirsty man eating an orange is a Muslim from Pakistan who embraces capitalism, then learns that it may not have room for “the other” in its black, acquisitive heart. Changez himself isn’t that much of a bargain either, although as played by Ahmed, a British actor and rap artist, he is appealing enough that we root for him even as he enacts the Punjab version of Wall Street. The son of a famous poet (a delicate cameo by Om Puri) whose fortunes are fading into the crude melting pot of callous capitalism that becomes another of the film’s symbols, Changez goes to the U.S. to attend Princeton University and make his fortune. He emerges as a clean-cut Ivy League go-getter who talks his way into a job with a Wall Street company run by Jim Cross, one of those smooth corporate tough guys whose bottom line is the bottom line. Cross is played with sly urbanity by Kiefer Sutherland, who brings to the table another unstated piece of cultural baggage he was the anti-terrorist fighter in 24, after all that at times threatens to sink The Reluctant Fundamentalist under the weight of its own metaphors. The movie is told in flashback: Changez, now a bearded professor in Lahore, is being questioned by Bobby Lincoln (Liev Schreiber, properly grizzled and sporting a name that could probably get him elected president), a journalist doing a story on the recent kidnapping of an American professor. Sutherland and Puri steal the show, with gritty and hooking performances. Changez may or may not be involved, just as Lincoln may or may not be more than he seems: The Reluctant Fundamentalist operates on several levels, all of them called out like elevator stops by director Mira Nair, whose experience in these cross-cultural environments (The Perez Family, Mississippi Marsala) can’t stop her from underlining every paradox. He turns out to be very good at this task; Jim, his boss, supposes it’s because he’s an outsider, although this thread is left unexamined in the film. He also finds love in the person of Erica (Kate Hudson, a little chunkier than we remember but looking good as a brunette), an artist mourning a dead lover. Chavez becomes both a replacement and an exotic accessory, “the ultimate downtown status symbol,” he later realizes. Erica, of course, is just “America” without one syllable. The Reluctant Fundamentalist is structured around the defining incident of our times. In New York after 9/11, Changez finds himself on the outside of society despite his capitalist credentials. Nair presents some nicely underplayed scenes Changez being searched at an airport in a silent humiliation, for instance that help us read his new look of confusion. It’s all structured like a thriller, with a group of American intelligence forces about to pounce on Changez, but this is a superfluous bit of plot-making; The Reluctant Fundamentalist is a small personal story, based on a novel by Mohsin Hamid, that has been inflated into an unwieldy epic. It’s a brave one, though, that dares to look through unfamiliar eyes at what we thought we knew about religious fundamentalists and capitalist fundamentals. Just as the Twin Towers attack make Americans more American, so they make him more Pakistani, and in response he grows a beard and begins to question his true identity. “It makes me who I am,” he says. Just who that is becomes the film’s mystery. In a startling scene, Changez allows a smile of admiration to cross his face after the 9/11 attacks,. “David had struck Goliath,” he says, and it secretly thrills him even as it challenges us.
feels like a two-hour homeland special without the fun. didactic, boring and in the end, extremely predictable. kate hudson and sutherland are immensely miscast, although Riz Ahmed and his parents do a decent job.