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Film sends timely `divide and rule` message, says director of Viceroy`s House

2017-03-02
LONDON: A new film exploring the partition of India will offer audiences a poignant reminder that using politics to divide communities is nothing new, its British director says.

Gurinder Chadha, whose grandparents lived through the violence that followed thebirthof Pakistanin1947, said it was important for her to mark the milestone with a film like Viceroy`s House.

`The film is a timelyreminder of what happens when politicians and leaders start using divide and rule, she said in an interview.

`Eventually, it leads to violence and it leads to death, and that doesn`t serve anyone.

The film, which opens in UK cinemas on Friday, focuses on the final preindependence days in of fice of Lord Mountbatten, played by Downton Abbey star Hugh Bonneville.It traces the turmoil that ensues as British and Indian leaders grapple with the issue of independence and looks at its effect on the Indian staff both Hindu and Muslim at the residence of the film`s title.

More than one million people died in the political earthquake set off when India and Pakistan became two countries and gained independence from Britain in 947. For Chadha, whoseother credits include Bendit Like Beckham and Bhaji on the Beach, the film offered the opportunity to redress what she views as the standard narrative blaming the violence on disputatious Indians rather than Britain`s divisive imperial policies.

`I wanted to challenge the historical narrative of parddonandindependence, the last days of The Raj. I wanted to challenge the way I had been taught it at school, based on the evidence that I had come across in my research,` she said.

Bonneville`s co-star as Lady Mountbatten is X-Files actress Gillian Anderson.

The protagonists among their staff are played by award-winning Indian actress Huma Qureshi and US actor Manish Dayal. The film also provides a valedictory role for veteran Indian actor Om Puri, who died in January.

For Qureshi, like Chadha, making the film was as much a personal as a professional journey.

`My grandfather`s sister was married in Pakistan and they lost touch for many, many years,` said Qureshi. `A few years ago, a man just popped up at my dad`s restaurant and he said, I think I`m your cousin... And they exchanged names and f amily trees, and he was. And of course, it was so overwhelming and so emotional.`-Reuters