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Heat and Dust By Jeff Shannon
A persistent clash of cultures lies at the heart of Heat and Dust,
the Merchant/Ivory team's most acclaimed drama prior to 1985's A Room
with a View. The celebrated trio of director James Ivory, producer
Ismail Merchant, and screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala were perfectly
suited to this time-skipping story of thwarted romance, based on
Jhabvala's novel, in which the colonial British find themselves
perpetually at odds with the vibrant rhythms of India. In this most
sensual of environments, two related British women, separated by six
decades, discover that their independent spirits are not entirely welcomed
within the confines of colonial etiquette. Olivia (Greta Scacchi) defies
her stringent husband in the 1920s, while her great-niece Anne (Julie
Christie) discovers, upon getting pregnant by an Indian local in the early
'80s, that she and Olivia have more than a little in common. Jhabvala's
feminism is subtle but forcefully dramatized, and under Ivory's sensitive
direction, this tale of two women is a defiantly resonant tribute to love
wherever one may find it.
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: James Ivory
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|  | Stars: Julie Christie, Greta Scacchi, Christopher Cazenove, Julian Glover, Susan Fleetwood, Shashi Kapoor, Madhur Jaffrey, Barry Foster, Zakir Hussain, Patrick Godfrey
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|  | Released: September 15, 1983
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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