In Bend
it Like Beckham (UK 2002), an independent-minded young woman discovers
the joys of football, much to her family's chagrin. Jess Bhamra (Parminder Nagra) is an 18-year-old growing up in
West London, where her family has taken every effort to stay in touch with its
Indian heritage. Jess' father and mother (Anupam Kher and Shaheen Khan) are
after their daughter to go to law school, learn to cook a traditional Indian
dinner, and settle down with a nice Indian boy -- the latter of which is high
on the agenda of her older sister Pinky (Archie Panjabi), who is soon to wed
her longtime beau Teetu (Kulvinder Ghir). However, her family is unaware that
Jess has a secret passion -- football (or soccer, as it's known in North America).
While Jess' enthusiasm for football star David Beckham is obvious, given the
fact his photos cover the walls of her room, her parents don't know that in her
spare time she likes to play a friendly game in the park with some of the boys
in the neighborhood. One day, while Jess and her pals kick the ball around, she
meets Jules (Keira Knightley), who is quite impressed with Jess' skills. Jules
plays with a local semi-pro women's football team, the Hounslow Harriers, and
she thinks Jess has what it takes to make the team. Jess knows that her parents
would never approve of their daughter playing football, so she doesn't tell
them, and starts spinning an increasingly complex series of lies as she tries
to keep up a double life as a student and a footballer. Jess soon discovers a
number of her new friends have their own problems to overcome; Jules dreams of
playing pro ball in America, but has to deal with her stubborn and disapproving
mother (Juliet Stevenson), while Joe (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), Hounslow's Irish
coach, still struggles with the disappointment of a career as a professional
athlete which was dashed by a knee injury. Bend It Like Beckham was a
significant box-office success in Great Britain and Europe, but didn't reach
American theaters until nearly a year after it debuted in the U.K. (Mark
Deming, Rovi).
Here’s the script
and the study
guide from Film Education.
For an analysis of the film (adopting a postcolonial
approach) and underlying the limitations of an understanding of “culture” as homogenous
and static, you can read Chacko,
M.A (2010) Bend It Like Beckham:
Dribbling the Self Through a Cross-Cultural Space, in “Multicultural Perspectives”,
12(2): 81–86.
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