The Sunday Guardian

A heartrendi­ng rom-com based on real life The Big Sick

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Director: Michael Showalter Starring: SKumail Nanjiani, Zoe Kazan, Holly Hunter, Ray Romano, Anupam Kher, Zenobia Shroff, Adeel Akhtar, Bo Burham, Aidy Bryant, Shenaz Treasurywa­la and Kurt Braunohler Despite a convention­al and staid tale of “a brown Muslim boy dating a white nonMuslim girl” and navigating through modern living and traditiona­l upbringing, The Big Sick is a heart melting romantic comedy that is refreshing­ly light-hearted. It is based on the real-life story of the Pakistan- born, US stand-up comedian Kumail Nanjiani.

The film begins with Nanjiani, an Uber driver and part-time comic, giving us an insight into his roots. The first act reveals how during one of his shows he meets Emily ( Zoe Kazan) who heckles him from her seat among the audience and the slow burgeoning romance between them while his culturally—orthodox parents, unaware of Emily’s existence, are trying to fix a girl for him. While following the expected rom-com beats, this section stands out due to the wonderful, quirky chemistry between the lead pair.

In the second act, their relationsh­ip falls apart after Emily learns that Kumail hasn’t admitted to his parents that he is dating a white woman and that she would never be accepted by his family. Seeing no future together, they break up.

But they are soon thrown together by happenstan­ce, when Emily is admitted into the hospital for an inexplicab­le, life-threatenin­g medical condition, which forces Kumail to sign the hospital papers to induce her into medical coma.

Soon, guilt and self-realisatio­n draw upon Kumail, while he spends some awkward moments in the hospital along with Emily’s par- ents, who unlike his parents know everything about their failed affair. The third act predictabl­y balances the heft.

Written by Kumail Nanjiani and his wife Emily V. Gordon, the script is straight from the heart. Layered with romance, culture clash and the profession­al struggle of the protagonis­t, the plot simply captures the right nuances and comic relief with tremendous sincerity that makes it relatable and appealing.

Humour is strewn sporadical­ly by sardonic wit which is delivered with a straightfa­ced seriousnes­s.

What also makes you appreciate in the film is the earnest performanc­es of the cast. Kumail with his pokerfaced charm feels completely natural playing himself. Zoe Kazan emulates the vivaciousn­ess of Kumail’s wife Emily effortless­ly.

Zenobia Shroff and Anupam Kher, in relatively small but prominent roles as Kumail’s parents are stereotypi- cal yet charming.

As Emily’s parents, Holly Hunter and Ray Romano are a big draw. With welletched character graphs and live-wire performanc­es, especially Holly’s, they deliver substantia­lly.

In other supporting roles, Bo Burham, Aidy Bryant and Kurt Braunohler as Kumail’s best friends and cocomedian­s are perfunctor­y. In miniscule roles, Shenaz Treasurywa­la and Adeel Akhtar as Kumail’s sisterin-law and brother Naveed are wasted.

Overall, with moderate production values, The Big Sick is a pleasingly feel-good film. IANS

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