Monday, September 14, 2009

Worlds Collide In This Ocean Of Pearls

Amrit Singh and his girlfriend Smita come from deeply spiritual and traditional Sikh familes of Toronto. Amrit is offered a prestigious job in Detroit at a state-of-the-art transplant center which is too good to pass up. Unfortunately he did not ask his girlfriend or family before accepting the offer. A series of personal and professional events lead Amrit to question his tradition in Ocean Of Pearls.

The tense juxtaposition of ancient culture and modern world has offered ample subject matter to filmmakers over the past couple of decades, and Ocean of Pearls shows the theme is far from exhausted. That it does so in a pointedly low-key manner -- no heads get broken here -- makes it all the more interesting, even if the dramatic cues lean at times toward TV-movie territory. First-time director and writer (and Detroit physician) Sarab Neelam deals with a difficult, complex subject in a manner that is obviously heartfelt. Amrit Singh (Omid Ahtabi) is a Sikh physician in Toronto when he's lured to a new transplant program in Detroit. Leaving behind his girlfriend, Smita (Navi Rawat), Amrit moves to Michigan.  But once he gets to Detroit he finds the turban he wears as a sign of his religion and heritage gets in the way of his career, as a bland-looking white guy threatens to win the job Amrit deserves. At the same time, he finds himself drawn to an administrator (Heather McComb) at the hospital where he works. So Amrit does the once-unthinkable -- he cuts his long hair off and stops wearing his turban. He hides this from Smita when she comes for a visit, but eventually must confront his staunchly traditional father (Ajay Mehta) with his decision.

The acting here is surprisingly even and Neelam rarely betrays himself as a newbie behind the camera. For a local indie film, this "Ocean" is smooth indeed. The only questions have to do with the story. Co-written by V. Prasad, it can be overly heavy at times, and then at the end it resolves somewhat abruptly, leaving the message to this message movie a bit vague. Still, as a vehicle for demystifying the Sikh life while again highlighting the confusion of the modern world, Ocean of Pearls works well indeed. This gets a 3 on my "Go See" scale.

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