2006 British film by Pratibha Parmar
Nina's Heavenly Delights |
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Film poster |
Directed by | Pratibha Parmar |
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Written by | Andrea Gibb |
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Story by | Pratibha Parmar |
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Produced by | Pratibha Parmar Marion Pilowsky Chris Atkins |
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Starring | Shelley Conn Laura Fraser |
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Cinematography | Simon Dennis |
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Edited by | Mary Finlay |
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Music by | Steve Isles |
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Production companies | Kali Films Priority Pictures |
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Distributed by | Regent Releasing |
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Release dates |
- 29 September 2006 (2006-09-29) (United Kingdom)
- 21 November 2007 (2007-11-21) (United States)
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Running time | 94 minutes |
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Country | United Kingdom |
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Language | English |
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Nina's Heavenly Delights is a 2006 British drama romance comedy film, directed by Pratibha Parmar. The film was released on 29 September 2006 in the United Kingdom, and on 21 November 2007 in the United States.
Synopsis
When young Glaswegian cook Nina Shah (Shelley Conn) returns home for her father's funeral after three estranged years in London, England, she begins a romantic relationship with Lisa (Laura Fraser), an old childhood friend who now owns half the late father's Indian restaurant, The New Taj. Together they seek to save the restaurant by winning the national "Best in the West Curry Competition" for a third time. Nina's mother Suman (Veena Sood) and brother Kary (Atta Yaqub), however, want to sell the place to fellow restaurateur Raj (Art Malik), whose chef son Sanjay (Raji James) had been left at the altar by Nina. Lending the young women moral support is Nina's flamboyant gay friend Bobbi (Ronny Jhutti), and Nina's younger sister Priya (Zoe Henretty).
Cast
Critical reception
The film gained mostly negative reviews, and received 16% on the critics score on Rotten Tomatoes. It was also a commercial flop. The film only made $267 on its opening week in the US and Canada. It grossed $50,171 worldwide.
AfterEllen said "showcasing a positive lesbian relationship while avoiding some of the typical queer film catch traps is where Nina’s Heavenly Delights succeeds....If we’re measuring ingredients by heart, this one is just right."[1]
The New York Times said, "Diluted by menu pornography and cringeworthy dance routines, ... the movie's central romance barely qualifies as such. 'It's all about chemistry,' Nina says. Too bad she and her co-star possess so little."[2]
Producer Chris Atkins said it was "the worst film that I or anyone else has produced".[3][4] He used the film as an example to criticise the now defunct UK Film Council. He said the film "ticked all the boxes" and, as a result, was granted £250,000 by the Film Council via Scottish Screen. Atkins said it was a "waste of public money".[5] This was somewhat ironic as, in July 2016, Atkins was jailed for five years for defrauding HMRC in a film-finance tax scam.[6]
Awards
Soundtrack
The film's soundtrack includes the Shelly Poole's song "Lost in You" and "Maybe That's What It Takes" by Alex Parks.
See also
References
External links