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Recommended Partition (McMullen, 1987)

Ken McMullen, 1987

Star Review

In August 14th and 15th, 1947, the British Indian Empire was partitioned on religious grounds into a secular India and a Muslim Pakistan, which then became independent nations. In the mass migration that followed, with over 14 million people changing countries, terrible violence erupted and up to a million were killed.
Ken McMullen’s powerfully provocative film, adapted by Tariq Ali from Saadat Hasan Manto's famous short story Toba Tek Singh, takes place immediately before and in the days following Partition. Set in both a lunatic asylum in Lahore and in a map room where officials draw the new border, it takes as its subject the fact that even asylum inmates were forcefully separated on religious grounds. Actors play dual roles as officials and inmates in counterpointed scenes. Throughout, a cleaning lady provides a knowing commentary.
Appropriately for the film's themes of division and the co-existence of several selves, mirrors and veils play a large part in the production design. Theatrical rigour then combines with intricately plotted camerawork to thrilling effect – no more so than when Roshan Seth crosses the border between the film’s worlds, moving from the map room to the asylum in an unbroken 10 minute take that finds you holding your breath for its sheer audacity.
The film grows in conviction throughout and when Saeed Jaffrey, on learning that he must leave the asylum, climbs a tree, refuses to move, and delivers his impassioned ‘what have you done to my world?’ speech with a terrifying force, the drama pierces to the core. The devastatingly calm conversation that follows, in the Gymkhana Club in Delhi, where a British General calls the slaughter that followed Partition 'one of the dreadful ironies of history', chills.
The British soldiers and officials leave to the strains of Auld Lang Syne, but the film's final words, 'what is broken is broken', tell the real story here.

Graeme Hobbs on 12th July 2007

View all 228 of Graeme Hobbs’s reviews

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By Clydefro Jones on 27th August 2007

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DVD Extras
  • Audio commentary from director Ken McMullen and writer Tariq Ali
  • Interviews with Tariq Ali and Saeed Jaffrey. English & French subtitles.
Film Details

Director

Ken McMullen

Year

1987

Country

UK

Cast

Saeed Jaffrey, Zia Mohyeddin, John Shrapnel, Zohra Sehgal, Roshan Seth

Technical Details

Certificate

12

Length

78 mins

Label

2RUN

Format

DVD Colour

Region

2

Aspect

1.33:1

Cat No

SECONDRUN030

Main Language

English

Subtitles

French

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