People recommend A Passage to India movie (Passaggio in India).
Movie Is being made - in 1984.
FAKE: At the closing of the copy, near channel of Dr. Aziz write a epistle, a display with firework be going next to al fresco his porthole. The colors red, playground, and purple all circle stirring all equally at two put a barrier between interval, indicating studio lights instead of fireworks., CONT: When Adela climbs up the hill and goes into the cave, she is wearing white shoes. When she runs down the hill, she is wearing black shoes., GEOG: When Stella gets out of the car to view the Himalayas, she turns her head slowly from left to right to view each summit, then finally looks in the middle. However, each summit that she looks at has a shadow on a different side, and the final shot of a summit has no shadow at all., SYNC: In a faraway shot at the "bridge" party at the club, an all-Indian band is playing, but the conductor's beat pattern is off- the song is in common time (4/4 time), but he is beating beat 3 when the band is playing beat 1., CONT: When Adela, Mrs. Moore, and Dr. Aziz are riding the elephant, the first close-up shot of Adela and Dr. Aziz shows certain landmarks on the rock in the background. The next shot is a long shot of the elephant's feet as it walks. The third shot is another close-up of Adela and Dr. Aziz passing the same landmarks at the same starting point., FACT: Exiting the caves, Mrs. Moore sees a full moon overhead in the mid-day sky. This is an astronomical impossibility.
Mrs. Moore: My dear, life rarely gives us what we want at the moment we consider appropriate. Adventures do occur, but not punctually., Mrs. Moore: God has put us on earth to love and help our fellow men.::Ronny: Yes, mother., Richard Fielding: [on the glasses found on Aziz after the latter's arrest] If Adela had hit him with it, he'd hardly take it with him.::McBryde: I'm not surprised.::Richard Fielding: I don't follow.::McBryde: When you think of crime, you think of English crime. The psychology's different out here., McBryde: [at the trial] Before we begin, I'd like to state what I believe to be a universal truth: the darker races are attracted to the fairer, but not vice-versa.::Advocate Amrit Rao: Even when the lady is LESS attractive than the gentleman? [court breaks out in laughter], Das: [Ali is carrying on during the trial] Please, this is no way to defend your case!::Ali: I am not defending a case - and YOU are not trying one! We are both slaves!::Das: Mr. Mahmoud Ali, if you don't calm down, I will have to exercise my authority.::Ali: Do so! This trial is a farce! [throws papers off the desk] I'm going! I've ruined my career! [to Aziz] Farewell my friend!::Ali: Mrs. Moore! Where are you, Mrs. Moore?, Ali: How is Britain justified in holding India?::Dr. Aziz H. Ahmed: Unfair political question!::Richard Fielding: No, no! Well, personally, I'm here because I need a job.::Ali: Qualified Indians also need jobs!::Richard Fielding: I got here first. [laughter] Well, I like it here and that's my excuse.::Advocate Hamidullah: And those Englishmen who do not like it here?::Richard Fielding: Chuck 'em out. [laughter]::Ali: Indians are also saying that., Major Callendar: [to Ronny, on Mrs. Moore] She's old - we musn't forget that. Old people never take things as one expects., Turton: [in a club meeting] There is a certain member here present who is known to be in contact with the defense. One can't run with the hare and hunt with the hounds - at least not in this country!::Richard Fielding: I'd like to say something.::Turton: Please do.::Richard Fielding: I believe Dr. Aziz is innocent. I will await the verdict of the jury. If he is found guilty, I will resign my post and leave India. I resign from the Club now! [exits], Dr. Aziz H. Ahmed: [to Ali and Hamidullah when Fielding visits] No, he does not need THREE chairs! He is NOT THREE Englishmen!, Ronny: [on Aziz] He was dressed in his Sunday best, and his back collar stud was out. And there you have the Indian all over., Dr. Aziz H. Ahmed: You shouldn't walk alone, Mrs. Moore. There are bad characters about, and leopards may come down from the Marabar Hills - snakes also!::Mrs. Moore: You walk alone.::Dr. Aziz H. Ahmed: I am used to it.::Mrs. Moore: Used to snakes?::Dr. Aziz H. Ahmed: I'm a doctor - they dare not bite me!, Adela Quested: I do so hate mysteries.::Richard Fielding: We English do.::Mrs. Moore: I rather like mysteries - but I rather dislike muddles.::Richard Fielding: A mystery is only a high-sounding term for a muddle. Me and the Professor know that India is a muddle.::Professor Godbhole: Agreed, I am sorry to say., Indian crowd member #1: [pointing at Mr. Fielding and Adela leaving in the carriage] That was Mr. Fielding!::Indian crowd member #2: And Mrs. Moore!::Entire Indian crowd: Mrs. Moore! Mrs. Moore! Mrs. Moore!...
Soundtrack: "Tea For Two" Written by 'Vincent Youmans' (qv) and 'Irving Caesar' (qv)
'Peter Cellier' (qv) was deleted from the final print, 'Richard Wilson (II)' (qv) replaced 'Nigel Hawthorne' (qv)., 'David Lean (I)' (qv)'s first (and last) film after a 14-year hiatus from the industry. He was so devastated by the negative reviews of _Ryan's Daughter (1970/I)_ (qv), he dropped out of the filmmaking scene., The relationship between 'David Lean (I)' (qv) and 'Alec Guinness' (qv) deteriorated during the making of the movie. The final straw came for Guinness when he found out that a large chunk of his scenes had been left on the cutting floor by Lean. Neither man ever met or spoke to the other again., Two of the actors had acted in a 1965 Play of The Month version of the Novel. 'Saeed Jaffrey' (qv) in the same role and 'Ishaq Bux' (qv) as Alli., The original Broadway production of "A Passage to India" by 'Santha Rama Rau' (born in Tamil Nadu, India) opened at the Ambassador Theater in New York on January 31, 1962 and ran for 109 performances.
Gross: $27,187,653 (USA) (21 April 1985), $26,861,678 (USA) (14 April 1985), $26,420,482 (USA) (7 April 1985), $25,752,389 (USA) (31 March 1985), $24,816,971 (USA) (24 March 1985), $23,368,194 (USA) (17 March 1985), $21,874,907 (USA) (10 March 1985), $20,593,285 (USA) (3 March 1985), $18,696,127 (USA) (24 February 1985), $16,644,219 (USA) (18 February 1985), $13,289,029 (USA) (10 February 1985), $9,756,701 (USA) (3 February 1985), $6,528,622 (USA) (27 January 1985), $3,844,281 (USA) (20 January 1985), $2,076,680 (USA) (13 January 1985), $1,340,681 (USA) (6 January 1985), $924,991 (USA) (1 January 1985), $316,153 (USA) (25 December 1984), $84,580 (USA) (16 December 1984), $27,187,653 (USA), $4,313,000 (UK), $3,231,365 (Germany), SEK 5,237,221 (Sweden)
Copyright Holder: Thorn EMI Film Finance plc
Weekend Gross: $240,326 (USA) (21 April 1985) (157 screens), $309,164 (USA) (14 April 1985) (198 screens), $457,547 (USA) (7 April 1985) (260 screens), $583,679 (USA) (31 March 1985) (287 screens), $1,081,601 (USA) (24 March 1985) (498 screens), $1,077,553 (USA) (17 March 1985) (537 screens), $1,075,039 (USA) (10 March 1985) (515 screens), $1,393,859 (USA) (3 March 1985) (541 screens), $1,677,005 (USA) (24 February 1985) (645 screens), $2,578,374 (USA) (18 February 1985) (629 screens), $2,626,286 (USA) (10 February 1985) (650 screens), $2,522,842 (USA) (3 February 1985) (639 screens), $2,033,367 (USA) (27 January 1985) (291 screens), $1,507,319 (USA) (20 January 1985) (218 screens), $592,628 (USA) (13 January 1985) (40 screens), $290,952 (USA) (6 January 1985) (14 screens), $483,618 (USA) (1 January 1985) (13 screens), $186,442 (USA) (25 December 1984) (3 screens), $84,580 (USA) (16 December 1984) (3 screens)
Filming Dates: November 1983 - June 1984
Budget: $16,000,000
Admissions: 108,106 (Sweden)
Opening Weekend: $84,580 (USA) (16 December 1984) (3 screens)
Interviews: Brownlow, Kewin. David Lean. Richard Cohen Books
Novel: Forster, E.M.. Passage to India, A
Tensions relating Indians and the colonial British come to a burning when a white feminine guest accuse a young-looking Indian run of the mill practitioner of rape during a call in to more than a few cavern. A become skilled at of colonial contact and the humour of remembrance. Based done E. M. Forster's new-fangled., Circa 1920, during the Indian British rule, Dr. Aziz H. Ahmed was born and brought up in India. He is proficient in English, and wears Western style clothing. He meets an old lady, Mrs. Moore, at a mosque, who asks him to accompany her and her companion, Adela Quested, for sight-seeing around some caves. Thereafter the organized life of Aziz is turned upside down when Adela accuses him of molesting her in a cave. Aziz is arrested and brought before the courts, where he learns that the entire British administration is against him, and would like to see him found guilty and punished severely, to teach all native Indians what it means to molest a British citizen. Aziz is all set to witness the "fairness" of the British system, whose unofficial motto is "guilty until proved innocent.", Adela Quested, a young Englishwoman, travels to India in the late 1920s to visit her fianc, a British magistrate posted in a small town; her traveling companion is his mother Mrs. Moore. They want to see something of the country and to meet everyday Indians, but are frustrated by the British community's insistence that relations with the locals are best experienced from a distance. Finally, a friend introduces them to a Muslim doctor whom Mrs. Moore had seen briefly on her visit to a mosque. He takes them on an outing to the nearby caverns (a local attraction), but what happens there threatens to destroy any civility between the British and Indian societies.
Certificates: Iceland:L, Canada:PG, Norway:12, West Germany:6, Brazil:Livre, Argentina:Atp, Australia:PG, Chile:TE, Finland:K-11, Sweden:11, USA:PG, Ireland:PG, UK:PG, Singapore:PG, Netherlands:AL
Color Info: Color
Countries: UK, USA
Genres: Adventure, Drama, History
Languages: English, Hindi
Locations: Bangalore Palace, Bangalore, Karnataka, India, India, Ramanagaram, India, Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, England, UK
Runtimes: 163
Sound Mix: Dolby
Tech Info: RAT:1.85 : 1, LAB:Technicolor, OFM:35 mm, PCS:Spherical, PFM:35 mm
Release Dates: USA:14 December 1984, USA:25 January 1985, Australia:7 March 1985, Sweden:15 March 1985, Netherlands:4 April 1985, Italy:5 April 1985, France:24 April 1985, West Germany:26 April 1985, Brazil:3 May 1985, Argentina:30 May 1985, Hong Kong:11 July 1985, Japan:10 August 1985, Denmark:23 August 1985, Finland:30 August 1985
David Lean, the Director of "Doctor Zhivago", "Lawrence of Arabia" and "The Bridge on the River Kwai", invites you on . . .[A Passage to India]
In movie played:
Paul Anil (actor)
Mohammed Ashiq (actor)
Victor Banerjee (actor)
Birth Notes:Calcutta, West Bengal, India
Was instrumental in forming the first Screen Extras Union in India.
Birth Date:15 October 1946
Adam Blackwood (actor)
Articles:"The Guardian" (UK), 2 December 2006, by: Mark Honigsbaum, "Going on with the show"
Spouse:'Nicola King (I)' (qv) (18 January 1989 - present); 2 children
Birth Notes:England, UK
Other Works:Founded and is the director of his own bespoke theatre company, Private Drama Events., Provided a commentary for the Doctor Who DVD "The Mysterious Planet".
Where Now:(March 2008) Lives in London with his wife and two children.
Graduated from RADA (Royal Academy of Dramatic Art) in 1981., In 1993 he set up a corporate entertainment company called Private Drama which stages theatrical shows for private functions.
Birth Date:1959
Ishaq Bux (actor)
Death Notes:London, England, UK
Birth Notes:Kampur, India
Death Date:2 September 2000
Birth Date:15 June 1917
Michael Culver (actor)
Spouse:'Lucinda Curtis' (qv) (1962 - ?), 'Amanda Ward' (? - present)
Interviews:"Radio Times" (UK), 16 October 1982, pg. 13, 15, 51, by: David Gillard, "Squadron"
Quotes:"There's too much Shakespeare played today. Frankly, I think he should be put to sleep for fifty years".
Birth Notes:Hampstead, London, England, UK
Magazine Covers:"Radio Times" (UK), 16 February 1963
Other Works:Performed in Harold French's "A Share in the Son" in the Cambridge Theatre with Jessie Mathews in August 1966., Theatre: 1963: A Severed Head - Murdoch/Priestley (Criterion) with Paul Eddington, Heather Chasen, Robin Bailey, Sheila Burrell; director: Val May, Theatre: 1956 (December): The Sleeping Prince - by Terrance Rattigan (Streatham Hill) with PeterDyneley, Jane Hylton, Gawn Grainger, John Healey; director: Anthony Knowles, Theatre: 1979: An Ideal Husband - Wilde (Theatre Royal, Windsor) with Wendy Williams, Mary Kerridge, Jenny Quayle, John Counsell; director: Joan Riley, Dundee Rep: Directed by Anthony Page, Lesley Storm, Raymond Westwell, Edward Furby, John Crockett, Mary Evans and James Ward Casts included: Tom Conti, Glenda Jackson, Nicol Williamson, Edward Fox, Gawn Grainger, Bruce Boa, Prunella Scales, Rowena Cooper, Ann Way, Jeffery Dench, Lucinda Curtis, Clare Stewart, Lillias Walker, Jeffery Wickham, Peter Gill, Keith James, Elizabeth MacLennan, Terry Palmer, Clare Stewart, Angela Ellis, William Marlowe, Trevor Martin, Valerie Wilson, James Ward, Hugh Bryning, Simon Fraser, Chris Smith, David Andrews, Frank McDermott, Sonya Petrie, Rosemary Toynbee, Frances White, Gilda Dahlberg, Margaret Anketell, James Ray, Susan Copley, Thomas Johnston, Joan MacArthur, Valerie Edeling, Jimmy Gardner, Wilma Ritchie, Callum Mill, David Roscoe, Nicholas Simons, Erica Rogers, Gordon Gilchrist, Frank McDermott, Rita Guenigault, Tom Young, Harry Carnegie, Pamela Donald, Sheena Howieson, Patricia Lowe, Anne McKenzie, Eileen Montgomery, Frances Sacco, Raymond Westwell, Stella Young, Monica Evans, Betty Watt, Duncan Bowman, Don Deuchars, Andrew Garland, William Bell, Jimmie Fung, John Taylor, Monica Evans, John Donald, Neil Curnow, Graham Curnow, Jeanette Rae, John Walters, Jill Elliott, Patrick Godfrey, Kate Binchy (The Curious Savage, 19th June to 1st July 1961; In Search of Happiness, 22 May 1961 to3 June 1961; Fools Rush In, 8 May 1961 to 20 May 1961; A Streetcar Named Desire, 24 April 1961 to6 May 1961; Tomorrow's Child, 10 April 1961 to22 April 1961; The Cat and the Canary, 27 March 1961 to8 April 1961; The Critic and the Heart, 27 February 1961 to 11 March 1961; See How They Run, 13 February 1961 to 25 February 1961; Born Yesterday, 16 January 1961 to 28 January 1961; Death of a Salesman, 5 December 1960 to 17 December 1960; Five Finger Exercise, 7 November 1960 to 19 November 1960; Roar Like a Dove 3, October 1960 to 15 October 1960; The Blind Madonna, 19 September 1960 to 1 October 1960; Eighty in the shade, 11 July 1960 to 23 July 1960; Dear Brutus, 27 June 1960 to 9 July 1960; Any Other Business, 18 April 1960 to 30 April 1960; Lucky Strike, 4 April 1960 to16 April 1960; Caught Napping, 21 March 1960 to2 April 1960; Summer of the Seventeenth Doll, 7 March 1960 to 19 March 1960; Gilt and Gingerbread, 8 February 1960 to 20 February 1960; I Have Been Here Before, 25 January 1960 to 6 February 1960; Murder on Arrival, 11 January 1960 to 23 January 1960; Sinbad the Sailor, 23 December 1959 to 9 January 1960; The Importance of Being Earnest, 7 December 1959 to 21 December 1959; Brothers in law, 23 November 1959 to 6 December 1959; Present Laughter, 9 November 1959 to 22 November 1959; The Long and the Short and the Tall, 26 October 1959 to9 November 1959; The Manor of Northstead, 12 October 1959 to 25 October 1959; Love in a Mist, 28 September 1959 to 11 October 1959; Not in the Book, 14 September 1959 to 27 September 1959; The Vanity Case, 31 August 1959 to 13 September 1959; Charley's Aunt, 3 August 1959 to 16 August 1959; Love from a Stranger; The Durable Element)
James Fox (actor)
Alec Guinness (actor)
Nigel Havers (actor)
Peter Hughes (actor)
Saeed Jaffrey (actor)
Rashid Karapiet (actor)
Z.H. Khan (actor)
H.S. Krishnamurthy (actor)
Moti Makan (actor)
Art Malik (actor)
Ashok Mandanna (actor)
John Michie (actor)
Mellan Mitchell (actor)
Duncan Preston (actor)
Roshan Seth (actor)
Clive Swift (actor)
Richard Wilson (actor)
Peggy Ashcroft (actress)
Phyllis Bose (actress)
Judy Davis (actress)
Ann Firbank (actress)
Sandra Hotz (actress)
Sally Kinghorn (actress)
Dina Pathak (actress)
Antonia Pemberton (actress)
John Brabourne (producer)
Richard B. Goodwin (producer)
John Heyman (producer)
Edward Sands (producer)
E.M. Forster (writer)
David Lean (writer)
Santha Rama Rau (writer)
Ernest Day (cinematographer)
Maurice Jarre (composer)
Judy Moorcroft (costume designer)
David Lean (director)
Pamela Allen (miscellaneous crew)
Mohini Banerji (miscellaneous crew)
Charles Cannon (miscellaneous crew)
Eleanor Chaudhuri (miscellaneous crew)
David Cherrill (miscellaneous crew)
Eddie Fowlie (miscellaneous crew)
Diana Hawkins (miscellaneous crew)
Yeti Jindal (miscellaneous crew)
Lee Katz (miscellaneous crew)
Richard Morrison (miscellaneous crew)
Christopher Palmer (miscellaneous crew)
P.N. Parthasarathy (miscellaneous crew)
Pat Pennelegion (miscellaneous crew)
Brioni Pereira (miscellaneous crew)
Kevin Phelan (miscellaneous crew)
Germinal Rangel (miscellaneous crew)
Rex Saluz (miscellaneous crew)
Thomas Thanangadan (miscellaneous crew)
Maggie Unsworth (miscellaneous crew)
Marcus Wilford (miscellaneous crew)
John Box (production designer)
Herbert Westbrook (production designer)
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Nice post - Adam Blackwood ..Keep Posting
ReplyDeleteRon
Adam Blackwood Pictures
FreeWallpapers
Fascinating facts - a real winner.
ReplyDeleteFor more information on the locations used in the film see my website:
http://www.mapability.com/travel/p2i/index.php
Regards, Travelling Tim