The Sun Sets On The
British Empire-Dame Judith Dench’s The
Best Exotic Madrigal Hotel
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank
Jackman
The Best Exotic
Madrigal Hotel, starring Dame Judith Dench, Maggie Smith, Dev Patel, 2012
In the days of the
Raj, in the days when the British ruled India with an iron fist, a massive
naval fleet at the ready, and footloose soldiers of fortune (or rather of no
fortune since the eldest son took all the dough and land and left younger
brothers to the universities, the clergy, the civil service and the army) no
one from the imperial center would have thought to retire to that benighted
country. Rather they would spent their youth grabbing whatever they could grab
and retire back in the old country in some at least modest splendor. Ah, but
times have changed and John Bull has hit upon tough times as the denizens of
this witty and thoughtful film demonstrate. Now the average Brit seeing his or
her life circumstances at home reduced looked to the new emerging economic
engine of the 21st century the old Raj to make ends meet, or to just
get away from the stale life in the home country.
Of course the setting
of this film in the old Raj, and in an old hotel that had seen better days with
a cast of wayward elderly ex-patriates and a wacky entrepreneurial Indian
allows the director and scriptwriter to investigate all kinds of subjects from
multiculturalism to haughty vestiges of the old Empire refracted through new
India, ageism, sexual impulses about the older set, adjusting (or not) to a new
culture, old school closeted gayness, stale marriages, failed marriages and the
aches and pains of growing old wherever you find yourself marooned. Somebody had
to tell the story though and that is done through the thoughts of the narrator
Mrs. Greensleeves (played by Dame Judith Dench) who had gone off to India to
live cheaply since her late husband did not provide enough to keep her going,
and to find herself of course. Along the way she does so although not without
the usual problems of those who were sheltered from the world by old school
marriage when hubby did, or didn’t, take care of everything. She finds herself,
her presence helps a husband caught in a horrible and stale marriage find
himself (and indirectly that scorned wife as well), helps a lonely old man finds
love, helps a lonely old women continuing to hope to find love, and helps the
Indian innkeeper to stand up for himself against the old India represented by
his old-fashioned mother. All wrapped up in the bow of a hotel that had seen
better days, and all relationships filled with if not happy endings at least
hope as they fade. A feel good movie with a great ensemble cast well worth a
couple of hours of your time.
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