Los Angeles Times

Charming pursuit of a better life

- — Michael Rechtshaff­en

There has been no shortage of films tracking the immigrant pursuit of the American dream, but few have been as laugh-outloud delightful as “The Tiger Hunter,” a sparkling first feature by Lena Khan.

Danny Pudi of NBC’s “Community” is Sami Malik, the affable son of a legendary tiger hunter.

Upon arriving in Chicago from his native India in 1979, Sami learns that the engineerin­g position waiting for him has been eliminated because of company restructur­ing.

With the clock ticking on a six-month work visa, he reluctantl­y takes a low-level gig at a microwave oven manufactur­er and is taken under the hospitable wing of the gregarious Babu (an equally terrific Rizwan Manji), who shares an apartment with a dozen roommates as well as his fiancée — a cardboard standee of Mary Tyler Moore.

“She told me I’m going to make it after all,” explains Babu matter-of-factly. “So right away I fell in love.”

Generously peppered with similarly droll observatio­ns as well as Danny’s sweetly rendered attempts to win the hand of his lifelong crush, the lovely Ruby (Karen David), the screenplay by Khan and “Modern Family” scribe Sameer Gardezi may follow a familiar path, yet it feels as crisply effervesce­nt as Patrice Cochet’s warm and vibrant cinematogr­aphy.

Just like the late MTM, the filmmakers well understand the value of turning the world on with a smile.

“The Tiger Hunter.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 33 minutes. Playing: In limited release.

 ?? Shout! Factory Films ?? DANNY PUDI plays an immigrant who scrambles to find his way in 1970s Chicago after a job falls through.
Shout! Factory Films DANNY PUDI plays an immigrant who scrambles to find his way in 1970s Chicago after a job falls through.

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