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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesYears later, Reshna’s father is but a distant memory, and she’s grown up to become a petulant teen heartbreaker. Fights with her mother are frequent: in fact, every conversation seems to revolve around Meena’s struggles to bring the family stateside, and the complete lack of communication with Vishnu. She rebels with a load of extracurriculars, including one detour that results in a moment of sexual violation by a classmate. While she does not report this interaction, he continues to taunt her, grinning like a hungry wolf when he sees her.
A final reel shift into suspense thriller feels like the film’s very last concession to throwing in the kitchen sink, as if not nearly enough has happened to our characters. All the while, we’re forced to seek a twist, a hidden theme, or even a threat from Adem, Meena’s new American husband. As played by Aidan Quinn at his oily best, Adem is frequently sloshed throughout the narrative, but allowed to up the skeeze factor, Quinn plays his snarly, uninformed interloper as an opportunist, easily attracted to Meena’s considerable beauty. As he cups a wine glass at a party, it almost feels like they should have given him a pussycat to stroke, or a big red button over which to hover. Like the rest of the miscalculated “Festival Of Lights,” it’s a gross violation of tone akin to a Tyler Perry effort, tone-deaf and dedicated to forcing its narrative ahead at the sacrifice of sense or pleasure. [D+]
"Festival Of Lights" is now playing in limited release.
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1 Comment
Zoe | November 15, 2012 11:31 PM
Hmmm, too bad, but I read 1-2 good things once.