I – Proud to Be an Indian
I – Proud to Be an Indian | |
---|---|
Directed by | Puneet Sira |
Written by | Puneet Sira Vekeana Dhillon Sohail Khan Jay Verma |
Screenplay by | Puneet Sira Vekeana Dhillon Sohail Khan |
Story by | Sohail Khan |
Produced by | Sohail Khan |
Starring | Sohail Khan Kulbhushan Kharbanda Aashif Sheikh Hina Tasleem Vadivelu Tim Curry |
Cinematography | Dev Verma |
Edited by | Rakesh Kumar Singh Chirag Jain |
Music by | Daboo Malik K. C. Loy OZ & JKEYZ XLNC |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 145 minutes |
Country | India |
Languages | Hindi English |
I Am Proud to Be an Indian is a 2004 Indian Hindi-language action drama film written and directed by Puneet Sira and produced by Sohail Khan.[1][2][3]
The film, about racism against South Asians in Tower Hamlets, was shot in a span of thirty days in the UK and was budgeted between Rs. 4.5 crore and Rs. 5 crore.[1][2]
Plot
[edit]A Sikh couple alights from a bus at night on an isolated street in Brick Lane. The woman is pregnant. They are followed by National Front white power skinheads and are brutally attacked and sodomised.
"I," along with his father, reach London. They go to the house of their son in Tower Hamlets, who is living along with his wife, son, and illegitimate teenage daughter. Later, they see the news and learn that the brutalised bodies of a Sikh couple were found and it was a suspected hate crime. They attend the last rites of the deceased couple in a gurdwara.
Later on, the skinheads attack an Indian store owner, dousing him in flour and throwing him through a plate glass window. These goons believe that England belongs to white people. The family has to taste fãêces when Kamal is cornered and humiliated. She returns home in shock. "I" learns of this and beats off three white racist goons. His brother doesn't lodge a police complaint out of concern for his family's well-being and safety. He tells "I" to keep quiet for the safety of the family, which "I" reluctantly agrees to.
"I" is attacked by a group of Pakistanis (whose leader Aslam runs a grooming club) because he suspects him of stealing his sister's necklace. He lets him go after his sister confirms 'I" saved her from a white racist group who tried to attack and assault her, in the process leaving her necklace behind, which "I" finds. "I" finds out after an outing with the sister that one of the attackers was the sister's brother. Later on, "I" goes to the boxing club and challenges Aslam to a boxing match, which results in a respectful draw between the two. "I" reminds Aslam they are from the same culture, traditions, and part of the world, and even if they are from different countries, their people should always stick together and fight against white people and inequality and not side with the racists out of fear and just to lead a peaceful life.
The fight and this advice from "I" lead to the two having respect for each other and eventually lead to them becoming close friends. Aslam, after the powerful advice from "I," ultimately gains the courage to stand up to the racist group, killing one of their members, but this leads to his death by the gang. Later on, "I" fights Nick Griffin (the shadowy gang leader of the nationalist group), and "I" wins.
Cast
[edit]- Sohail Khan as I
- Kulbhushan Kharbanda as I's father
- Jagjit Singh Chohan as gurdwara head
- Aasif Sheikh as I's brother
- Mona Ambegaonkar as Kamal, I's sister in law
- Hina Tasleem as Noor Firoz
- Tim Curry as Kane
- Nick Griffin as himself
- Alex Mileman as Crumb
- James Owen as Monk
- Vadivelu as corner shop owner
- Stephen Yaxley-Lennon as white nationalist
- Imran Ali Khan as Aslam
- Ben Dover AKA Kieran Markham as the token white wedding guest
- Michelle Thorne as item number
References
[edit]- ^ a b "I - Proud To Be An Indian". Bollywood Hungama. 13 February 2004. Archived from the original on 9 February 2009.
- ^ a b "Fighting rather in 'I'". Sify. 2 January 2004. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012.
- ^ "Newcomers undeterred by the flop wave". Sify. 19 February 2004. Archived from the original on 19 October 2012.
External links
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