Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 22000000
Revenue
$ 77737889

Mahatma Gandhi

Margaret Bourke-White

General Dyer

Lord Irwin

Judge Broomfield

Lord Chelmsford

Kasturba Gandhi

Vince Walker

Reverend Charlie Andrews

Nathuram Godse

General Jan Christiaan Smuts

Dr. Herman Kallenbach

Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel

Mirabehn

Mohammad Ali Jinnah

Khan

Pandit Nehru

Senior Police Officer Fields

Principal Secretary

Advocate General

Collins

Kinnoch

G.O.C.

Sir George Hodge

Gopal Krishna Gokhale

Maulana Azad

Sir Edward Gait

Prakash

Apte

Karkare

Manu

Abha

Commentator

Lord Mountbatten

J.B. Kripalani

Porter

European Passenger

Conductor

Baker

Tyeb Mohammed

Singh

Police Sergeant

Reporter

Rich Merchant

Ayah

Harilal Gandhi

Manilal Gandhi

Ramdas Gandhi

Nahari (uncredited)

Daniels

Colin

Youth

Youth

Colin's Mother

Sonja Schlesin

Tyeb Mohammed's Friend

Man in Gallery

Miner

Manager of the Mine

Mounted Police Sergeant

Clergyman

Prison Officer

Prison Guard

Young Englishman

Older Englishman

Young Indian Reporter

English Reporter

American Reporter

Older Indian Reporter

Motilal Nehru

Mrs. Motilal Nehru

Traveller on Train Roof

Traveller on Train Roof

Cavalry Troop Leader

Shukla

Nehru's Friend

Nehru's Friend

Nehru's Friend

Nehru's Friend

Subaltern

Sergeant Putnam

Village Leader

Villager

Villager's Wife

Policeman

Batsman

Wicket-Keeper

Major

Police Guard

Magistrate

Clerk

Young Man

Secretary

Chauffeur

Servant

Brigadier

Speaker in Jallianwalla Bagh

A.D.C.

Government Advocate

Lord Hunter

Indian Barrister

Mahadev Desai

Policeman at Chauri Chaura

Policeman at Chauri Chaura

Marcher at Chauri Chaura

Marcher at Chauri Chaura

Boy with Goat

Police Superintendent

Clerk of Court

Court Reporter

Court Reporter

Court Reporter

General Edgar

Brigadier

Pyarelal

Sarojini Naidu

Subaltern

Zia

Police Officer

Ramsay MacDonald

Little Girl

Colonel

Adjutant

American Lieutenant

Major at Aga Khan Palace

Doctor at Aga Khan Palace

Lady Mountbatten

Hindu Youth at Ashram

Woman Refugee

Man Refugee

Abdul Ghaffar Khan

Police Commissioner

Tahib

Sushila Nayyar

Hindu Youth in Calcutta Street

Hindu Youth in Calcutta Street

Hindu Youth in Calcutta Street

Hindu Youth in Calcutta Street

Hindu Youth in Calcutta Street

Hindu Youth in Calcutta Street

Nehru's Aide

Suhrawardy

Goonda

Goonda

Goonda

Goonda

Goonda

Radio Reporter at Funeral (uncredited)

Man in the Crowd (uncredited)


Lawyer

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2024-01-26
As career defining roles go, this has to one of the more masterful efforts from Ben Kingsley who manages to engage right from the start with his sprightly, intelligent and considered portrayal of this visionary and independently minded man of peace. Arriving in South Africa, his baptism into a sea of bullishness and racism quickly tests his mettle and soon has him on the radar of a General Smuts (Athol Fugard) government that was as yet unused to any sort of challenge from the non-white elements of society. Unafraid to take a beating, or to challenge the cultural norms without own his own caste-driven society, he is swiftly back in India where, flushed with a degree of success, he allies with Pandit Nehru (Roshan Seth) and becomes even more determined to use the sheer size of the dominated Indian population to rebel against the last vestiges of post war Raj. His strategy of non-cooperation sees him incarcerated and separated from those he loved but, again, his patience and determination made even the most formidable of his foes realise that this man was just a bit different - and that he was on a path to a victory that necessitated a dignified, but definite, retreat. The latter part of the story illustrates well that old adage about the difficulties of winning the peace, made more difficult by intolerances of an all together different nature, before a denouement that history dictated for all. Richard Attenborough told a story of his first meeting with Prime Minister Nehru when he was planning this film, and of how that ten minutes of courtesy ended up considerably longer and more beneficial to the look of this beautifully filmed biopic. Using grand scale cinematography that focusses on the vastness and variety of the country, but also using an intimate and really quite tough to watch style of photography as the brutish behaviour towards the colonised was clearly demonstrated. As to the exact nature of the history, I'm not sure that detail mattered so much as the overall assemblage of some of the great from British stage and screen who seemed, by themselves, to offer an heart-felt apology for what had gone on as the sun did start to set on the Empire. There features also a gently supporting effort from Geraldine James's Mirabehn and Candice Bergen also helps the narrative's chronology along as the photo-journalist never far from Gandhi's side. It's long and can be a little sluggish at times, but the sheer participatory nature of this is reminiscent of the epic cinema of the days when crowds were real, cheap, colourful and enthusiastic - and that all adds to the richness of this classy and stylish production. Big screen experiences don't come much more poignant and this is well worth a watch in a cinema if you can.