Mississippi Masala was made at a time after Denzel
Washington had hit it big with 1989’s Glory, but while he still sometimes did a
smaller film like The Mighty Quinn (1989), Devil in a Blue Dress (1995), and
this one. This was a lucky casting break
for director Mira Nair (Monsoon Wedding) because her financial backers had
pulled out after Ben Kingsley declined a role in the film. Once Washington
signed on he was a big enough name to attract other backers and get the movie
made. This was a good thing because the
film is now an interesting diversion from Washington ’s better known big box
office/action hero persona.
Nair had come to the attention of the movie world with her
prior film Salaam Bombay! (1988), which was nominated for the Best Foreign
Language Film Oscar. After that success
she and that film’s screenwriter Sooni Taraporevala started researching their
next project, Mississippi Masala. They
spent a considerable amount of time in Uganda as well as the American South
in order to get the details right. They
succeeded.
In the early 1900s a number of people from India had gone to Uganda to help build a
railroad. After it was completed some of
them stayed there and raised families.
They tended to be better off financially than the native Ugandans so
when Dictator Idi Amin came to power in the early 1970s he ordered all of them
out of the country. They had to give up
their homes and land. One such family
was father Jay (Roshan Sheth – Gandhi, Monsoon Wedding), mother Kinnu (Sharmila
Tagore – the young bride in The World of Apu), and their daughter Meena (played
as an adult by Sarita Choudhury in her film debut.) It was the role of the father that Kingsley
was originally going to play.
Fast forward to the present (1990) and this family has
eventually moved to be with relatives living in the southern state of Mississippi in the United States . These relatives own a motel and the family
stays there. In return Meena works at
the motel as a maid, cleaning rooms. Jay
still dreams of one day being able to return to Uganda and reclaim his land and fortune. In the meantime, the years have made him
bitterly hate not just Idi Amin and his “Africa
for Africans” movement, but all black people in general. His quest to return to Uganda forms a sizable subplot in the
film, perhaps as a remnant of the role’s importance being set higher when
Kingsley was going to be cast.
Entering into this picture is Demetrius Williams (Washington ), a black man
who runs his own carpet cleaning business.
He is hired to clean the carpets in the motel and naturally he and Meena
continue to run into each other. A
flirtation grows and the two finally start to date, but in secret lest her
father ever find out. He does, of course,
and the phrase “conniption fit” is probably a mild one to describe his
reaction.
Unfortunately for Demetrius and Meena, who are now in love
with each other, it’s not just her father that has a problem with it. Demetrius’ father (Joe Seneca) and brother
(Charles S. Dutton) also want nothing to do with Meena. The combined pressures of the two families
may just force Demetrius and Meena to do something desperate to protect their
love.
Washington and Choudhury have some good chemistry together
and Nair used the opportunity of shooting in America
to include at least one intimate scene that likely would never have been
allowed in India
at the time the film was made. For those
that don’t know, the term “masala” means a mix of spices and it is often
associated with Indian cooking. For the
purposes of this film it’s the mixing of the different races and the spicy
nature of their relationship. Despite
the film’s R rating there is nothing graphic in it, though. It’s just another example of the MPAA
over-reacting to the races of the people in the sex scene. (See the documentary
This Film Is Not Yet Rated for much more on the hypocrisy of the MPAA.)
The financial backers actually did try to get Nair to
replace the two leads with white actors, despite the fact that it would have
rendered pointless the entire story about an Indian family with roots in Uganda whose
father had an even deeper reason to hate a black man than just simple racism.
In regards to the interracial aspect of their relationship I honestly can’t think of a single other film that features a black/Indian couple, of either gender configuration. This might make this movie unique.
In regards to the interracial aspect of their relationship I honestly can’t think of a single other film that features a black/Indian couple, of either gender configuration. This might make this movie unique.
In addition to the praise she earned for Mississippi Masala,
Nair received something even better: she met her second (and current) husband
while in Uganda
researching this film. He was a third
generation Ugandan Indian man, much like the family depicted in the movie. The film is not his story, though; he had
left Uganda to teach in the U.S. before
Amin came to power.
There are a couple of interesting things at the end of the
credits, if you’re like me and watch the entire film. The first is that the phrase “hakuna matata”
appears – three years before The Lion King would be released. The second is that Washington and Choudhury
pose together in “traditional” (i.e. African and Indian) attire.
Mississippi Masala isn’t a perfect film. Those looking for everything to be wrapped up
in a nice, neat package may not like this movie. Anyone who is a fan of Denzel Washington’s
“more acting, less gunshots” subset of films should probably check this
out. For everyone else, if it sounds
interesting then I recommend you give it a try.
Chip’s Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
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