Los Angeles Times

Child traffickin­g at heart of ‘Sold’

- — Gary Goldstein

Important story, subpar execution. That’s the takeaway from “Sold,” a disturbing, Dickensian tale of human traffickin­g that called for a more epic telling than this choppy, rudimentar­y adaptation of Patricia McCormick’s 2006 novel.

Lakshmi (Niyar Saikia) is a poor 13-year-old girl from Nepal whose parents unwittingl­y send her off with a charismati­c visitor to their mountain village, to supposedly work as a domestic in India. However, once Lakshmi arrives in Kolkata, she finds herself imprisoned in a shabby brothel and forced to work under the iron fist of its cruel madam. Witnessing the naïve, terrified and at times drugged Lakshmi submit to the bordello’s nasty, violent clientele is tough stuff and belies the film’s lenient PG-13 rating.

Meanwhile, an intrepid American photograph­er (Gillian Anderson) joins forces with a local human rights group, which includes an undercover investigat­or (Parambrata Chatterjee), to help rescue Lakshmi from her heinous environmen­t. This story strand, though ultimately integral, is too cursorily woven in to gain any real momentum.

Director Jeffrey D. Brown, who co-wrote with Joseph Kwong, lets things slacken and turn a bit episodic after the film’s midpoint. It’s unfortunat­e that they were unable to bring stronger narrative and filmmaking skills to this vital subject. Better to check out 2005’s similarly themed Oscar-winning documentar­y, “Born Into Brothels,” which, not coincident­ally, Brown says inspired his work here. “Sold.” MPAA rating: PG-13, for disturbing thematic material involving the traffickin­g of children. Running time: 1 hour, 34 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica.

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