- An impoverished family faces challenges and obstacles after strikes/shut-downs/arson shut down Mumbai's mills.
- Today, there is hardly anyone who hasn't visited the swanky shopping malls, nightclubs, lounge bars, clubs and other such lifestyle destinations that sprung up across the centre of Mumbai. However, very few know that buried deep below these glittering edifices to consumerism lies the dark, dirty and painful reality of many thousands of mill workers who once worked the cotton mills in this very same area. Rising and toiling to the wail of the mill sirens each and every day, seven days a week, these workers embodied the true unbridled zeal and unflagging spirit of the city and played a pivotal role in the evolution of Mumbai as the modern day business capital of India. And then it suddenly was as if they never existed. Following the mill workers strike in the mid-80s, these mills began closing down rapidly and the mill-workers mysteriously disappeared. What happened to them, and where they went is one of the most shameful secrets that the city of Mumbai will have to bear for generations, one that until now has always been spoken about in hushed whispers. City of Gold - the story of these long-forgotten masses - not only explores the apathy of these mill workers narrated through the story of one such family, but is also a take-no-prisoners account of the birth of the true underbelly of organized crime in Mumbai. The film traces the birth of the politics of greed in Mumbai and exposes the unholy collusion between the triumvirate of big business, the political establishment and the trade union leaders who ostensibly were charged with protecting the rights of the mill workers. In the two decades that followed, the entire landscape of Central Mumbai was changed forever. Land became the currency of growth, and this began the systematic extinction of mills in Mumbai. In a matter of just a few years, hundreds of thousands of workers lost their means of livelihood. Truth... as is said, is stranger than fiction. But the truth that the film uncovers is not just stranger but darker and dirtier than any mind has ever imagined.—Anonymous
- Anna Dhuri purchases a flat in modern day Parel, Mumbai, while his live-in girlfriend, Mansi, wants him to invest in one in Shivaji Park. He narrates to her why he associates himself more with Parel, and the struggle his family went through the turbulent 1980s. His father, Giri, After being virtually forced to retire, is yet to receive any pension in order to provide for his family, consisting of his wife, Lakshmi; daughter Manju; and three sons: Anna, Mohan and Naru. Lakshmi prepares Tiffins for office-goers, while Manju and Mohan are employed in a beauty parlor and bank respectively. An unemployed Anna spends most of his time writing a play, while Naru is a hoodlum. Things start to deteriorate even more after Manju gets intimate with the grocer's boy, Jignesh, becomes pregnant, and the shock paralyzes Giri. Hardly had this issue settled, then Mohan is arrested for embezzling Rs.25000/-, is arrested, but Anna inexplicably comes up with the money and gets him released. After finding that Jignesh is already married, Manju is coerced to marry Union Leader Arvind Rane, and re-locates to live with him. Things steadily get worse, the owners of the mill postpone payment and even have the premise burned down; and Naru is arrested for his involvement in the homicide of a male owing money to a gangster, Parshya Bhai, but is subsequently released on bail. While the Dhuris struggle to even feed themselves, they experience even more trauma and shocks after Giri passes away, and Naru goes on the run after killing a Union Leader named Govind Rahate.—rAjOo (gunwanti@hotmail.com)
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By what name was City of Gold - Mumbai 1982: Ek Ankahee Kahani (2010) officially released in Canada in English?
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