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IMDbPro

The Namesake

  • 2006
  • 12
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
22K
YOUR RATING
Kal Penn in The Namesake (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Fox Searchlight Pictures
Play trailer2:31
7 Videos
51 Photos
Drama

American-born Gogol, the son of Indian immigrants, wants to fit in among his fellow New Yorkers, despite his family's unwillingness to let go of their traditional ways.American-born Gogol, the son of Indian immigrants, wants to fit in among his fellow New Yorkers, despite his family's unwillingness to let go of their traditional ways.American-born Gogol, the son of Indian immigrants, wants to fit in among his fellow New Yorkers, despite his family's unwillingness to let go of their traditional ways.

  • Director
    • Mira Nair
  • Writers
    • Sooni Taraporevala
    • Jhumpa Lahiri
  • Stars
    • Kal Penn
    • Irrfan Khan
    • Tabu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    22K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mira Nair
    • Writers
      • Sooni Taraporevala
      • Jhumpa Lahiri
    • Stars
      • Kal Penn
      • Irrfan Khan
      • Tabu
    • 148User reviews
    • 153Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 8 nominations

    Videos7

    The Namesake
    Trailer 2:31
    The Namesake
    The Rise of Irrfan Khan
    Clip 4:18
    The Rise of Irrfan Khan
    The Rise of Irrfan Khan
    Clip 4:18
    The Rise of Irrfan Khan
    The Namesake
    Clip 0:44
    The Namesake
    The Namesake
    Clip 0:59
    The Namesake
    The Namesake
    Interview 0:39
    The Namesake
    The Namesake
    Interview 0:30
    The Namesake

    Photos51

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    + 45
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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Kal Penn
    Kal Penn
    • Nikhil a.k.a. Gogol
    Irrfan Khan
    Irrfan Khan
    • Ashoke
    Tabu
    Tabu
    • Ashima
    Jacinda Barrett
    Jacinda Barrett
    • Maxine
    Zuleikha Robinson
    Zuleikha Robinson
    • Moushumi Mazumdar
    Brooke Smith
    Brooke Smith
    • Sally
    Sahira Nair
    • Sonia
    Jagannath Guha
    • Ghosh
    Ruma Guha Thakurta
    Ruma Guha Thakurta
    • Ashoke's Mother
    Sandip Deb
    • Music Teacher
    Sukanya
    Sukanya
    • Rini
    Tanushree Shankar
    • Ashima's Mother
    Sabyasachi Chakrabarty
    Sabyasachi Chakrabarty
    • Ashima's Father
    Tamal Ray Chowdhury
    • Ashoke's Father
    Dhruv Mookerji
    • Rana
    Supriya Choudhury
    Supriya Choudhury
    • Ashima's Grandmother
    • (as Supriya Devi)
    Stuart Rudin
    Stuart Rudin
    • Homeless Man
    Heather MacRae
    • Nurse Patty
    • Director
      • Mira Nair
    • Writers
      • Sooni Taraporevala
      • Jhumpa Lahiri
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tabu admitted that in all the years she had lived in India, she had never seen the Taj Mahal. The scene in the movie where the family goes to see the Taj Mahal was her first time seeing famous tomb.
    • Goofs
      Several anachronisms show up in the 1977 flashback sequences showing Calcutta (Kolkata); the railway station shows a sign for Indusind Bank which was not established until the late 1990s; there is a building of The Telegraph which was not launched till 1982; and there are shots of several bridges and buildings which are only recent additions to the city.
    • Quotes

      Ashoke Ganguli: The camera! It is in the car. All this and no picture, huh? We just have to remember it then. Huh? Will you remember this day, Gogol?

      Gogol: How long do you I to remember it?

      Ashoke Ganguli: [laughing] Ah, remember it always. Remember that you and I made the journey and went together to a place where there was nowhere left to go.

    • Crazy credits
      Kal Penn is credited twice - once as Kal Penn in the role of Gogol, and once as Kalpen Modi (his birth name) in the role of Nikhil.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: 300/The Namesake/I Think I Love My Wife/Beyond the Gates/The Host (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Ye Mera Divanapan Hai
      Written by Shankarsingh Raghuwanshi, Jaikishan Dayabhai Panchal (as Shankar Jaikishan) and Shahryar (as Sharyar)

      Performed by Susheela Raman

      Courtesy of Narada Productions, Inc.

      Under license from EMI Film & Television Music

      (played in the scene of Kal Penn's wedding night)

    User reviews148

    Review
    Review
    Featured review
    7/10

    A story of the power of a name and of family; the immigrant experience; the search for love, context, and identity

    In 2003 days after its publication, I could hardly put down Pulitzer-winning Jhumpa Lahiri's novel "The Namesake". Lahiri was born in London to Bengali immigrants, raised in Rhode Island, and now lives in Brooklyn.

    I was therefore excited when I heard that Mira Nair would be directing a film based on the novel. Readers may be familiar with Nair's films, including "Monsoon Wedding" (2001), "Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love" (1996), "Mississippi Masala" (1991), and Oscar-nominated "Salaam Bombay!" (1988); she is also in pre-production on a crime drama, "Shantaram", due in 2008.

    Mumbai-based graduate of Harvard (where she met Nair) Sooni Taraporevala wrote the screenplay, as she also did on "Mississippi Masala" and "Salaam Bombay!" (incidentally, she is apparently directing her first film, based on her own screenplay, due to be released this spring). I don't know why, but the setting of the film version of the story is changed from Boston to New York and moved about a decade forward.

    The story is that of the Gangulis - Ashoke (Irfan Khan) and wife Ashima (Tabu), Kolkata (Calcutta) immigrants to the U.S. in the early 1960s (1970s in the film), their son Gogol (Kal Penn), and his younger sister Sonali/Sonia (Sahira Nair). As a bachelor in India, Ashoke suffers in a train wreck, but his life is saved because, instead of sleeping on the nighttime journey, he had been reading "The Overcoat" by Russian writer Nikolai Gogol.

    When Ashoke and Ashima's first child is born, they are surprised that they cannot leave the hospital without naming him; they prefer to wait for the great-grandmother's suggestion. The name of the Russian writer occurs to Ashoke, and he assigns "pet name" Gogol. The "good name" that the great-grandmother mailed never arrives, so the name Gogol sticks. As the boy grows, his name bothers him; it is neither Indian nor American, nor even a first name. He legally changes his name at college to "Nikhil".

    The story follows Gogol/Nikhil as he goes to Yale University, is inspired to be an architect on a family trip to India when they visit the Taj Mahal, goes to graduate school and on to a job in New York City, and experiences several relationships. Wittingly or not, he follows the advice to "play the field" but to reserve marriage for a woman of Bengali origin.

    How do the US-born children relate to India? Where is home for the parents and how do they stay in touch and perform their duties while geographically separated from their extended family? "The Namesake" is a story of the power of a name and of family; the immigrant experience; the search for love, context, and identity.

    I enjoyed the film but, as often is the case, I found it to fall short of the book, whose power made me an instant fan of Lahiri's (watch for a cameo appearance by her in the film as Aunt Jhumpa). Armchair criticism is easy, and perhaps more meaningful insight is gained by asking if the medium is effectively used to convey the story's ethos.

    The answer is a gentle "yes". One of Lahiri's strengths is attention to detail revealed in a matter-of-fact style that doesn't belabor the obvious. But of course the film cannot fairly be expected to reveal all of the original's subplots, such as Gogol's first relationship with his college sweetheart Ruth, or the myriad details beautifully presented in the book surrounding multicultural birthday celebrations, for example.

    The film effectively contrasts the chaotic vibrancy of Kolkata with the much more restrained, anonymous big city life of the States through foundational scenes of bridges – the Howrah Bridge over the Hooghly River and Manhattan's 59th Street Bridge. In New York, we can see the business of modern city life rendered mute through a small apartment's glass windows; in India, no such respite from daily life is readily found. Another effective motif is the recurrence of the "Travelogues" exhibit at JFK Airport, reminding us through changing holographic images about the transition in space and culture that the Gangulis experience traveling between America and India.

    There are some particularly well composed, emotive scenes, such as the timidly uncertain wave goodbye of Ashima to Ashoke on their first morning in the New World when he leaves on dismal snowy streets for work. I wouldn't, however, characterize the film as a whole as having consistently memorable cinematography, though it is rather effectively subtly understated and helps the story's progress.

    The soundtrack could have been more appealing. Perhaps I was too focused on fidelity to the book which of course can simply be an irrelevant distraction, but I didn't relate to the music of high school student Gogol as characteristic of either the late 1970s or 1980s. Strictly speaking, the JFK exhibit was installed in 2000, which is inconsistent in fact and technology with most of the trips that the Ganguli family makes through the airport starting in the 1970s.

    All that said, Mira Nair has made a sensitive, touching, and interesting film that triggers an authentic collection of emotions from joy to despair, with dashes of convincingly real everyday humor and chance. I was happy to see in the closing credits two of the three best known Bengali filmmakers mentioned, "For RITWIK GHATAK and SATYAJIT RAY, gurus of cinema with love and salaams"; only Mrinal Sen is missing.

    I recommend both the film (expected to be released on March 9) and, especially, the book for immigrants and their friends, as well as to anybody who has felt significant loss, detachment, or uncertain change in their life. It is a story that is remarkable in its subtle depiction of the flip sides of the coin of history and promise.

    (I saw the film at a pre-release screening on February 16, 2007 in Cary, NC USA. My review is a version of one that I am publishing in the forthcoming March issue of "Saathee Magazine".)
    • Dilip
    • Feb 21, 2007
    • Permalink

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 10, 2007 (Netherlands)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Japan
      • India
    • Official site
      • Stream The Namesake officially on Disney+ Hotstar Indonesia
    • Languages
      • English
      • Bengali
    • Also known as
      • Тезки
    • Filming locations
      • Nyack, New York, USA(Nyack Library)
    • Production companies
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • Cine Mosaic
      • Entertainment Farm (EF)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $9,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,569,248
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $248,552
      • Mar 11, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $20,354,321
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 2 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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