Mr. and Mrs. Iyer (2002)
Director: Aparna Sen; Writer: Aparna Sen; Producer: N. Venkatesan; Cinematographer: Goutam Ghose; Editor: Rabiranjan Maitra; Cast: Rahul Bose, Konkona Sen Sharma, Bhisham Sahni, Surekha Sikri, Sunil Mukherjee, Anjan Dutt, Esha Chauhan, Kalyan Ray, P.P. Bajaj, Rahul Mulani, Shernaz Patel, Theron D'Souza, Mona Shetty, Vijaya Subramanium, A.V. Iyenger, Rabiranjan Maitra, Niharika Seth, Riddhi Basu, Arnab Moitra, Richa Vyas, Eden Das, Jishu Sengupta, Jaspal Singh, K. Deep, Kaushik Bose, Bidipta Chakraborty, Punam Singh, Masood Akhtar, Veena Kichlu, Surjeet Singh, Arnab Dutta, Rwita Dutta Chakraborty, Rajatabha Dutta, Shubham Singh, Joydeep Munshi, Vinayak Rao Joshi, Lakhan, Lal Babu Pandit, Chandan Sen, Dipak Ghose, Bharat Kaul, Suhail, Kajal Chakraborty, Shibnath Dey, Kartik Chintamani
Duration: 02:02:27; Aspect Ratio: 1.667:1; Hue: 20.000; Saturation: 0.070; Lightness: 0.188; Volume: 0.089; Cuts per Minute: 7.758; Words per Minute: 40.734
Summary: Meenakshi Iyer comes from a devout Hindu Brahmin family, purely vegetarian, who not only abstain from meat, but also food from restaurants, is the only child, married to Subramaniam Iyer from Tamil Nadu, has just given birth to a young son, Santhanam, and is visiting her mom. It is then they receive news that her mother-in-law is ill and wants Meenakshi back home in Calcutta. The parents arrange to drop her and her son off at the bus-stand, where they are introduced to a young photographer named Raja Chowdhury. Meenakshi's parents ask Raja to look after her, to which he agrees. The bus starts off, taking it's passengers through scenic hillside. The bus driver comes across a sign that the regular road is closed and he decides to take another route. After a few hours the bus comes to a stop as there is a line-up of vehicles ahead. The passengers are told that there has been a terrorist attack on a train resulting in the death of about 200 people. The region, predominately Hindu, believe that the attack was carried out by Muslims and there is retaliation by Hindu extremists. Curfew has to be imposed by the police to prevent further riots and casualties. It is then that a Police Jeep containing Police Officer Raj Arora drives by, asking all passengers to board their respective vehicles, as the area is under curfew. The passengers comply, shut the door, and wait for the traffic to clear. It is now dark and the silence is broken by men with fire-lit torches asking the driver to open the door of the bus, which he does. A group of extremists ask the passengers to identify themselves, and prove to them that they are Hindus, some have to take their pants off. Meenakshi identifies Raja as her husband, Mani. A Jew loudly claims that there are only two Muslims and points to Iqbal Ahmed Khan and his wife Najma. Iqbal is taken off the bus, a visibly upset Najma follows him, and they are killed. It is then the truth unfolds that Raja is not the young man's name but he is Jehangir - a Muslim. An upset Meenakshi must now come to terms with her Brahmin background, which prevents her from coming into contact, drinking water, sharing food, with even a non-Brahmin, leave alone a Muslim, especially now that she has identified him as her "husband" to protect him from being killed. The question remains will this "marriage" last or will Jehangir be discovered before they reach Calcutta.
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