Of all of her movies Salaam Bombay(Mira Nair, 1988) was probably the closest in resembling her work as a documenter and in this way it is also probably the most different from her other films. It still had many of the elements that make her movies her own though with the portrayal of
The other movies Monsoon Wedding(Mira Nair, 2001) and The Namesake(Mira Nair, 2006) were both very similar in their relation; both in film aspects as well as in the fact that they were done only five years apart from each other. They both dealt with arranged marriage as well as Mira’s home culture and bringing it to life and merging it with the western culture. Her use of English in Monsoon Wedding to help it seem more realistic to what
Vanity Fair(Mira Nair, 2004), like many of her films had a very strong woman in the lead. Becky Sharp was a very adaptive woman who used her social skills to manipulate others and survive. She falls in love with a soldier who’s fortune gets cut off from him by his family and so she has to end up finding out ways for them to survive. Later she ends up falling in love with another man and going off to
Mira Nair was probably my favorite director we’ve studied this semester. Of all the movies we’ve watched in both art of film I and II, I think Monsoon Wedding was one of my favorites. Mira does a wonderful job of making very intricate stories and putting her own culture into them. The mix of her views on marriage as well as women and her own love for India all culminate together and make her movies very much her own.
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