Viceroy’s House is history on a human level
One of the most touching moments of co-writer/director Gurinder Chadha’s “Viceroy’s House” comes at the end of the film, when she reveals her family’s personal experience during the strife and unrest India experienced upon its independence in 1947, after three centuries of British rule. When the borders of India were re-drawn to create Pakistan, more than 14 million people were displaced, in the largest mass migration in history, as Muslims traveled to Pakistan, and Hindus and Sikhs left their ancestral homes to immigrate within the newly drawn borders. Chadha’s acknowledgement of her family’s story is a poignant reminder of how this event continues to influence the political climate between India and Pakistan, and touch the lives of the people there in intimate ways.
Based on the book “The Shadow of the Great Game: The Untold Story of India’s Partition” by Narendra Singh Sarila, Chadha and co-writers Paul Mayeda Berges and Moira Buffini apply the “Upstairs, Downstairs” formula to the story of India’s last British viceroy, Lord Louis Mountbatten (Hugh Bonneville). Taking the viceroy’s house as a microcosm of the cultural climate in India at that time, Chadha explores the political and romantic dramas of the government leaders and the house staff, and especially those moments when they bleed into each other in such a close setting.
As Lady Edwina Mountbatten, Gillian Anderson is wonderfully steely, blending empathy with a no-nonsense approach to problem-solving. She is driven primarily by a desire to improve the conditions for the people of India, viewing them as equals, not subjects, and embodies the maxim about the great women behind great men.
“Viceroy’s House” starts off with a light, airy tone before descending into a romantic melodrama partnered with a dangerous ticking clock of civil upheaval in a time of uncertainty. Manish Dayal links these stories as Jeet, a close aide to Lord Mountbatten and completely smitten with translator Aalia (Huma Qureshi). The staff is riveted by the comings and goings in the house, with their fate hanging in the balance as Pakistani founder Muhammah Ali Jinnah (Denzil Smith), Mahatma Gandhi (Neeraj Kabi) and Jawaharlal Nehru (Tanveer Ghani) work with the Brits to strike an accord for India’s future.
There’s something pleasantly oldfashioned about “Viceroy’s House.” It feels like a Merchant and Ivory period piece posing cultural questions within a safely cushioned environment. Everything is on the surface and the characters state their intentions clearly _ there are no guessing games, but also very little subtext. The Romeo-and-Juliet-esque love story between Hindu Jeet and Muslim Aalia is an earnestly soapy bit of melodrama that grows increasingly high stakes as the crisis worsens.
“Viceroy’s House” opens with the words “history is written by the victors.” Chadha presents this film as an antidote to that, exposing the underbelly and human-scale machinations of this monumental moment. Archival footage spliced with re-created newsreels juxtaposes the presentation of this event with the stark, behind-the-scenes realities. But Chadha also deftly packages this story into something easily swallowed and understood, eliding the messier details.
“Viceroy’s House” is remarkable as a vital piece of history that Chadha herself has written, as a descendant, Indian woman and storyteller. Through this perspective, she is focused on the legacy of these events on a personal level, which reverberate throughout the India of today.