52 Films Directed By Women Vol 1: 24. FOR HERE OR TO GO (Director: Rucha Humnabadkar)
Pictured: Vivek (Ali Fazal) and Shveta (Melanie Chandra) in a scene from the South Asian-American IndieGoGo-part funded film, 'For Here or To Go', directed by Rucha Humnabadkar. Still courtesy of the Mumbai Film Festival.
For Here or To Go, an
entertaining look at the travails of an Indian tech worker, Vivek Pandit (Ali
Fazal) wishing to change employers in the United States, is the result of a
close collaboration between writer-producer Rishi Bhilawadikar and director Rucha Humnabadkar,
making her first feature. In terms of perspective, it is very male. How many
Indian women get visas to work in California’s Silicon Valley? Type that
question into google and you get asked something about silicone implants. The
wives of Indian men on H-1B visas are not allowed to work, even though they
have degrees. You could infer that Humnabadkar doesn’t identify with a typical
spouse of a tech worker. Why should she? She directs movies, although she has a
past career as a lead interaction designer, which is techie for creating
interactive products that acknowledge the emotion that they generate in the
user. Apparently you must cultivate
positive emotions and minimise negative ones. For Here or To Go generated plenty of positive emotion in 2015, playing
to full houses and winning a Jury Prize at the Seattle South Asian Film
Festival.
So what is an H-1B visa? It is used by tech companies to employ
guest workers with specialist skills. The number brought in each year is capped
at 65,000. But do these H1B visa holders try to settle in the US as Vivek does?
According to a 2013 article in ‘Mother Jones’, they ‘learn the job and rotate
back the home country’ taking the job with them. (Rotate? Isn’t it more of a
pivot?) The H-1B visa is used to
undercut the wages of a similarly skilled American-born worker, so they may not
be addressing a skill shortage at all. It can’t be nice to know that you are
only there as cheap labour. What must it be like when you go into a coffee
shop? No wonder the characters in this film prefer chai tea.
For Here or To Go was
filmed in San Francisco in 2013. Bhilawadikar and Humnabadkar raised funds -
$7,322 USD from 85 backers, to be precise – through a moderately successful
IndieGoGo campaign. Private financing also contributed to the budget. The film
was screened at the 2015 Mumbai Film Festival with Bhilawadikar’s mother joining
in promotional duties. (Thanks, Amma!) The makers are desperately trying to get
a distribution deal.
Vivek has less than a year to run on his visa. He is bored
in his current job and wishes to join another company. But to be re-hired by
another company in the US, he has to go back home. He doesn’t want this. His
flat mate returns to India leaving behind a new tenant, who is a bit of a slob.
He then invites another guy. Vivek catches the eye of Shveta (Melanie Chandra)
who at one point joins in him in a Bollywood style dance number. Most of the
acting by the white cast is wooden. They represent intractable authority. Only
the Indian characters are given any colour. That is kind of the point.
Stylistically, the film oscillates between banter and solemn
scenes in which Vivek is given Bad News. There is a subplot involving Shveta’s
father (Rajit Kapur) who is in dispute with his brother and thinks that young
Indians should go back home and help re-build the country. The film is set in
2009, when Bhilawadikar started the script. Vivek ends up being grilled by the
FBI and being put on a watch list, which is its own kind of inhibitor. He is
also revealed to be South Indian, which for some reason the audience I saw it
with (at the Nehru Centre in London) thought was hilarious.
So Indians on specialist visas unable to get a Green Card
are described as ‘bonded workers’. The film invites sympathy for Vivek – he
does quite well in the dance number. We learn something about a Sikh community
based way out of San Francisco and ultimately that while the American Dream
might be powerful, the Indian Reality is better.
There is one note of genuine darkness, when the film shows
how an Indian shop keeper was targeted after 9/11 – a sober corrective to the
japery of the rest of the movie. Vivek struggles to get some form of support –
a company to back him. I won’t spoil the ending, but the fairy tale is pulled
short – but it’s still happy, don’t worry.
You don’t get a sense of what kind of filmmaker Humnabadkar
is. Competent? Obviously. In control of her material? Yes. Capable of eliciting
good performances from the English-speaking Indian cast? Yes. Partial to
fast-motion footage showing life in the city? Well... She previously made a
short in 2012, Arranged Marriage,
which just from the title sounds like it has more bite to it. It is interesting that the
short film, according to IMDB, also features characters called Shveta and
Vivek, as the former tries to sabotage her date with the latter. Did I say that
in For Here or To Go, Vivek only
knows young women called Shveta – a young woman she Skypes with, a woman her
mother encourages him to meet and the girl that he falls for. You get a lot of
business in Indian movies, if not subtlety.
The British audience, not particularly young, embraced the
movie, but Tongues of Fire, the London Asian Film Festival hasn’t won over a
particular younger audience. So the film needs to be tested among its own
demographic, urban professionals. Time for another UK screening...
Reviewed at the Nehru
Centre, London, Monday 7 March 2016, 18:30, London Asian Film Festival
screening

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