The
Very Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Directed by John Madden
With Judi Dench, Maggie Smith, Tom
Wilkenson, Bill Nighy, Penelope Wilton, Sonny Kapoor, Celia Imrie
For those viewers who enjoyed “Slumdog
Millionaire,” here’s a movie you likely will enjoy. “The Very Best Exotic
Marigold Hotel” is loaded with equivalent pleasures. Not only will you
experience India’s assault on the senses: the riot of colors, the cacophony of
sounds, the endless procession of life, but you will also witness a Who’s Who
of British screen and stage greats. This sweetheart of a film has been called
“comfort food” for people of a certain age.
The story begins as a varied
group British retirees arrive in Jaipur, India. They have been enticed by an
advertisement that claims that The Very Best Exotic Marigold Hotel will offer a
life of luxury and leisure for those in their golden years for a fraction of
the cost of what they would pay at home. To their dismay, they arrive to find a
musty and dilapidated palace with drippy faucets, rooms without doors, a fine
layer of dust over everything, and food that is far too spicy.The
eager-to-please manager Sonny Kapoor (Dev Patel) assures them everything will
be OK, but that doesn’t appear likely to happen.
Recently widowed Evelyn (Judi
Dench) has come because her husband in London left her a mountain of debt. Doug
(Bill Nighy) and Jean (Penelope Wilton) have come to rekindle their marriage.
Fussbudget and racist Muriel (Maggie Smith) has come to get a hip replacement.
The closeted gay Grahmn (Tom Wilkenson) has come to find someone from his past.
They and the others in this film have their own reasons for coming. All of
these travelers face the challenges of India’s exotic culture and, by the end
of the film, each has been transformed by the experience.
What unfolds during “The Very
Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” is predictable and contrived. Each traveler tries
to deal with his new environment in his own way. Slowly but surely, each of
them, except for one, succumbs to the charm of India. You knew they would.
But director John Madden has
kept the pace brisk and the actors are a total pleasure to watch. Maggie Smith
steals scenes with her stuffy and bigoted unpleasantness. Judi Dench is
engaging and sensible as the narrator of the story. Tom Wilkenson is marvelous
in a most unusual role for him. Dev Patel’s youthful enthusiasm is boundless.
“The
Very Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” is most assuredly a crowd pleaser, especially
if you are over the age of 50 (60?). It is sentimental story with an ending that
may be a bit too tidy. But the scenes of India street life are absolutely
ravishing; the ensemble acting is simply captivating, and the story is
eminently satisfying. You will probably walk out of “The Very Best Exotic
Marigold Hotel” with a smile on your face.
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