Mar 162005
 

When Vadim Perel­man made House of Sand and Fog , I am sure he was think­ing Hebbel: “Gen­uine tragedies in the world are not con­flicts between right and wrong. They are con­flicts between two rights.”

Kathy (Jen­nifer Con­nelly) — a depres­sive, recov­er­ing alco­holic — is evicted from her South­ern Cal­i­for­nia home due to a cler­i­cal error, and Colonel Behrani (Ben Kings­ley) invests all his sav­ings to buy it from the county. To the Behra­nis, still suf­fer­ing from delu­sions of a grand lifestyle in native Iran — the house is the means to a dig­ni­fied life in Amer­ica. And thus the con­flict begins. Con­nelly is out­stand­ing as the vul­ner­a­ble Kathy, and Kings­ley turns in yet another stun­ning per­for­mance — sub­dued, alter­nat­ing with ease between hap­pi­ness and anger, con­fi­dence and self-doubt, with a taut energy lurk­ing behind his per­sona all the time. Great movie that barely broke even.

House of Sand and Fog reminded me of “Veedu” (The House) — a Tamil movie by Balu Mahen­dra that came out in the late nineties. Veedu is the story of an inde­pen­dent work­ing woman and her grand­fa­ther, and their dream of own­ing a house in Madras. Superb pac­ing and great per­for­mances make this one of my all time favorites in Tamil. Bet­ter pro­duc­tion val­ues, and the movie could have been Oscar mate­r­ial. Need­less to say, it tonked.

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