Director Mira Nair plots a winding trajectory from Idi Amin’s forced removal of Asians from Uganda in 1973 to the struggles of a small-time owner-operator carpet cleaner in 90s Mississippi. All this serves as a foundation for a culture clash romance struggling to blossom amidst the demands and expectations of southern African-American identity and a very specific form of an Indian immigrant experience.
If you’d like to watch ahead for next week’s film, we will be discussing and reviewing Jim Jarmusch’s Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999).