|
Commentary
on Bend It Like Beckham
Does
the Popular Film Ignore the Reality of Race and Class in Britain?
By
Daniel McNeil
The film Bend it like Beckham celebrates the struggle of Jess, a South
Asian teenager, to play football (soccer) against her parents
wishes. Like the famous Manchester United player, Jess seeks to create
magic on the football field and has her exploits projected in front
of thousands of spectators. Bend it like Beckham is the most profitable
all-British film of all time and has recently been released in Canada
and the United States. It demands critical reflection from multiracial/cultural
individuals and visible minorities in the UK and North America
if they wish to know how their role in the national team
is being imagined in the twenty-first century.
Gurinder Chadha, writer and director of the film, made a conscious
decision to always operate in the mainstream, but to make films about
people you dont normally see in the mainstream. Beckham deals
with gender, sexuality, cultural identity, Britishness and all those
things, but its totally dressed up as a teen movie. Despite
her disparaging comments about the American film industry, in Bend it
like Beckham Chadha still offers America (or at least California) as
the land of opportunity/money (eyeing the Hollywood market and soccer
moms, along with her American husband and home in California) and seeks
a generic, middle-class, suburban solution to societys ills, albeit
one that is not as segregated as the US.
Bend it like Beckham works on the basis that suburban people can identify
with the movie. Like My Big Fat Greek Wedding, such middlebrow attempts
to show middle-class consumers themselves often refuse to engage seriously
with economic privilege, racism or sexism. Instead they tend to fit
themselves into a multicultural mosaic and develop undemanding,
unambitious comedy where the future of the West is saved from
old-fashioned (-world?) prejudice and discrimination and tied to national
cultures free from extremism. The film was sure to receive cheers from
middle-class viewers looking for reassurance about the course of their
nation, especially when the girls prove that they are not lesbians and
can work together with sensible (male) figures who appreciate their
love of sports.
____________________________
Like My Big Fat Greek Wedding,
such middlebrow attempts to
show middle-class consumers themselves often refuse to engage
seriously with economic privilege, racism or sexism.
____________________________
Thus the tabloid press and many fans of the movie celebrate Bend it
like Beckham as just a British (English) movie because it doesnt
focus on serious issues that may be exploited by radicals.
As critic William Brown comments, Bend it like Beckham does not
make a big deal of any of the possible tensions in the film - be it
racial, gender, generational, sexual. It is just a British film - something
all too rare at the moment - and it gets on with telling the story,
in the same way that Jess learns just to get on with the game. In the
same way that the different characters just get on with each other (without
having to learn this). It is by getting on that you win.
Indians and true Brits win in the new Britain,
especially when they are just fed success stories. Along the lines of
Robin Cook claiming that chicken tikka massala (a curry dish) is now
a true British national dish, Chadha believes the success of the
film represents the Indianizing of Britain, hybridization of Britain.
Bend it like Beckham has also been well received in Canada, not simply
because of continued deference to the motherlands
(changing) tastes, but because of the desire of mainstream (middle-class)
individuals to move past (ignore) institutional racism. According to
the Toronto publication Now it is churlish to hate this movies
winning formula, because, as Chadha says, the film could refer
to people from the Caribbean in Toronto.
An insistence that such films are universal ignores the fact that not
everyone lives in suburbia. The majority of Torontos Caribbean
population would certainly find it hard to see their homes replicated
in the semi-detached southeast England on display in Bend it like Beckham.
And here lies my problem with such attempts to build a middle-class
mosaic and pass them off as representing the nation or cosmopolitan
cities throughout the world. Feel free to chronicle middle-class suburban
life, but dont claim it embodies the world today or
imply that its brand of cultural fusion represents a recent phenomenon.
Such arrogant remarks by cosmopolitan city dwellers will not only receive
attacks from the non-Western world but also increase the alienation
of working-class visible minorities who have been living
in diverse, culturally fluid areas in the West for centuries. Such working-class
ethnic minorities have long been living with common sense democratic
racists, although in the post-modern world their white antagonists
can also find themselves outside the new national image.
____________________________
The
majority of Torontos Caribbean population would certainly find
it hard to see their homes replicated in the semi-detached southeast
England on display in Bend it like Beckham.
____________________________
n promoting Bend It Like Beckham, Chadha implores the film celebrates
the processes of cultural change, the experience of living in a diverse
environment from one generation to another and not only the difficulties
involved but also the pleasures in becoming more integrated. Yet
surely the film shows that whites next door to a south-east Indian wedding
celebration can continue to live in blissful ignorance of the party
going on next door. Where interracial alliances are shown, we find the
new lower-middle class in England comprising well-educated visible minorities
reading The Guardian alongside the Del-boys (or Boycies) made good -
white English (who are impressed by the respect for elders in exotic
cultures) or Irish (who are allowed to - absurdly - explain that they
understand what being called a Paki means) individualists
from working-class backgrounds.
Thus in new Britain and Canada economic rewards seem to
be open for all. Non-white achievers can even obtain Mercedes
and shop at trendy sports outlets so long as they restrain themselves,
realize that names can never hurt them, and continue to
offer nice food while remaining apolitical and celebrate in national
sports where whites have (recently and oh) so (goodness) graciously
included them in the team. As soon as they begin banging
on about more rights and whites do not feel so willing to indulge
in a bout of liberal ecumenism, things might not be so rosy.
When whites own traditions are felt to be under threat,
when they dont own their own semi-detached home to keep up with
the Khans, we may understand the importance of a comment by The Observers
Philip French: The script by Chadha and her American husband,
Paul Mayeda Berges (who also worked as second unit director) takes every
easy way out and never recognises the possibility of real pain, the
way the tougher, far funnier East Is East does.
____________________________
As
soon as they begin banging on about more rights
and whites do not feel so willing to indulge in a bout
of liberal ecumenism, things might not be so rosy.
____________________________
Although it is unfortunate that reviewers feel compelled to compare
East is East with Bend it like Beckham because they both document South
Asians (even though East is East mainly dealt with Muslim communities
and Bend it like Beckham with Sikh ones), one should applaud the way
East is East, while being based in Salford, Manchester, could offer
laughter in pain, tackle the North and South of England, and comment
on working- and middle-class lives. Its a shame that to be accepted
as a truly national film, Bend it like Beckham had to try and assume
that suburban south-east England = Britain and that middle-class suburbia
(and truly awful nightclubs pumping out Top 40 hits) = the West. The
cultural landscapes of working-class and Northern communities also provide
the opportunity to learn about cultural and ideological diversity, where,
alongside council and social housing, underground dance music and high
levels of racially mixed couples, there is also the pain of racial profiling
and more overt opposition to integration (see the success of the far-right
British National Party in Burnley and Oldham). The threat of racism
and the far right may not be a feel good topic, but in flippantly
dealing with (or entirely ignoring) such issues, Bend it like Beckham
represents middle-class disengagement, leaving working-class ethnic
communities to fend for themselves in the hope that talented working-class
individuals will simply get on their bikes and eventually
offer them some exciting (but not too dangerous, mind you) culture.
Including some non-white color (usually brown) into the national mosaic
may help cool Britannia or mosaic images of Canada, but it doesnt
help those outside of suburbia fighting to build multiracial alliances.
____________________________
Its
a shame that to be accepted as a truly national film,
Bend it like Beckham had to try and assume that suburban south-east
England = Britain and that middle-class suburbia
(and truly awful nightclubs pumping out Top 40 hits) = the West.
____________________________
Multicultural people in the West should not simply use a
middle-class status to become new national citizens, employed
to display the merits of new integration. Instead they must
point to the cultural give and take displayed for centuries by multiracial
working-class communities such as Liverpool and Halifax in the face
of discrimination. Class and racial discrimination remain issues that
cannot be forgotten, because some whites and non-whites left out of
the picture displayed on the big screen arent talking integration.
Middle-class folks might like to see themselves on screen,
but perhaps they might also want to learn about the Other
parts of their nations in order to stop the tabloid press from condemning
scrounging welfare recipients or immigrants. Engaging with
angry white people worried about new immigrants, as well
as the hybridity of working-class youths, might not be safe.
Yet one cant just embrace the cultural integration of Bend it
like Beckham or Ali G, feel pleased about the direction of the nations
project to assimilate and learn from some (nice, funny, cuddly) non-whites,
and then forget about the anguish that those without economic capital
face when their working-class communities are left to suffer, in the
words of P.J. Waller, misfortunes quietly, to slide into weariness
and helplessness, and to be put out of sight.
This article first appeared in the Multiracial Activist.
Daniel McNeil is a graduate student at the University of Toronto. His
research interests include observing how inclusive rooted or indigenous
Black communities are of newer immigrants from Africa and the Caribbean
and looking at the rhetorical use of Americanization in Canada
and the US. He can be reached at daniel.mcneil@utoronto.ca.
This
website: Copyright © 2004 Dream
World Media, LLC. / Urban Mozaik Magazine. All rights reserved. The
opinions expressed in Urban Mozaik Magazine are not necessarily those
of Urban Mozaik Magazine and the publisher cannot be held responsible
for them. This website/publication, in whole or in part, may not be reproduced
without written permission from the publisher. |
|
|