Anonymous wrote:It was meh. Maybe I went into it with too high of hopes based on all the buzz and praise around it. It wasn't bad, but it certainly didn't live up to the hype. It wasn't *that* funny or *that* cute or *that* romantic or *that* thought provoking, and I feel like movies should stand out in at least one of those areas to get they kind of reviews The Big Sick got.
I'd give it a solid C. Really wasn't worth seeing in the theater, IMO. I think there's an Indian "moment" going on in media right now (which is not a bad thing, I enjoy a lot of the shows/movies I'd put in that category), and I think that led to higher praise than was warranted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What the hell does an "Indian moment" in entertainment have to do with anything?
I think the movie got better reviews than it deserved because it had a storyline about a Pakistani man. I think if it had been a movie about 2 white people, it would have been a major flop. Not sure how much more clear I can make it. I think there is an "Indian moment" in entertainment (The Mindy Show, Aziz Ansari's show and popularity, several other stand up comics), and people are intrigued by cross cultural relationships. I think this movie got the benefit of the popularity of the topic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What the hell does an "Indian moment" in entertainment have to do with anything?
I think the movie got better reviews than it deserved because it had a storyline about a Pakistani man. I think if it had been a movie about 2 white people, it would have been a major flop. Not sure how much more clear I can make it. I think there is an "Indian moment" in entertainment (The Mindy Show, Aziz Ansari's show and popularity, several other stand up comics), and people are intrigued by cross cultural relationships. I think this movie got the benefit of the popularity of the topic.
Anonymous wrote:
What the hell does an "Indian moment" in entertainment have to do with anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess it's just the podcasts that I listen to, but I heard a ton of interviews with them before the movie went into wide release. I really want to see it but unless a friend wants to go will probably wait until I can stream it--I just prefer to watch movies that way.
And Kumail is Pakistani, not Indian, 15:55, so I guess you didn't pay too much attention during the movie.
LOL, good point - but as he mentioned during the movie, they were Indian until 1947. Not THAT far removed, and my point still stands.
You're better off waiting to stream it.