Bend 
		It Like Beckham 
		--- Viewing Guide and Discussion Questions 
                                               
		Dr. 
		Michael Wutz, Weber State University | 
    
  
	 
	General: 
Like Mira 
	Nair's Monsoon Wedding, with which Bend it Like Beckham has a 
	lot in common, director Gurinder Chadha consciously fuses the conventions of 
	Hollywood with Bollywood films. Beckham, for all of you soccer 
	novices out there, alludes to David Beckham, the former British soccer 
	superstar of Manchester United who, last time I checked, was playing for the 
	Spanish team Real Madrid. Transposed into American popular culture, the film 
	could be titled Hit It Like Sammy or Dunk It Like Shaq. 
	Beckham has two "cameo" appearances at the beginning and the end of the film 
	and hence, in more senses that one, frames the film itself.
	
	 
	
	(1) Saris, Soccer, and Samosas
	
Similar to Monsoon Wedding 
	(though located in Delhi), Beckham shows an Anglo-Indian culture (in 
	London) in the throes of transition. Ancient rituals and traditions coexist, 
	not always peacefully, with cell phones and television shows. Aloo Gobi and 
	samosas share the (cinematic) table with hamburgers and Heineken, and Guru 
	Nanak and Guru Beckham seem equally important icons of worship, depending. 
	Locate some of the fault lines of the old and the new, of the East and the 
	West, and see how the various generations deal with this, if you will, 
	postcolonial dialogue.
 
	
	(2) Blurring the Boundaries of Gender
	
As a film blending and intermingling 
	various cultural traditions, Beckham also challenges and complicates 
	existent notions of femininity as they are traditionally defined in India 
	and England (and perhaps the West, more generally). The "transgressive" 
	behavior of Jess and Jules raises many an eyebrow, while Pinky is skillful 
	at hiding the parts of her modern self behind a facade of traditionalism. At 
	the same time, Jess's friend Tony, turns out to be gay, yet volunteers to 
	marry Jess so that she can play soccer in the US. Variously identified as 
	straight or gay, and as either breaking or making expected gender roles, 
	many of the film's lead players inhabit unstable identities. If Beckham 
	is indeed a film about "girls with balls" (following the playful title of 
	one of the film's reviews), it is also a film about "boys with balls," 
	though on different levels. Locate the scenes that speak to traditional and 
	transgressive expectations of gender, and ask yourselves why Chadha would 
	link the theme of fluctuating identities with the theme of cultures in 
	transition.
 
	
	(3) Fathers and Daughters
	
The fathers in Beckham 
	come across as, ultimately, more understanding than the mothers of their 
	daughters (and it may be worth noting that Chadha dedicated the film to her 
	own dad). Jess's dad, after some soul searching and prolonged reflection, 
	eventually puts aside his own experiences of racism in Kenya to let his 
	daughter—over his wife's wishes—go the America. Similarly, Jules's father is 
	all along supportive of his daughter's goals (in more senses than one), 
	while her mother—like Jess's—has to work through lingering expectations of 
	gender and success until she too is willing to let her go. While we don't 
	know the reaction of Joe's father to his professional success (he becomes 
	the coach to the newly-created professional division of the Hounslow 
	Harriers), viewers are reminded that he carries festering psychological 
	wounds as a result of conflict with his father. Identify the scenes that 
	emphasize the interactions of fathers (and mothers) with their daughters. 
	Why does the film portray the fathers as more understanding? What are we to 
	make of the interactions between Mr. Bhamra and Joe, and especially the 
	final scene? Why do they play cricket, and why does the camera move the way 
	it does?
	
	 
	
	(4) Audience and Style
	
Chadha has repeatedly noted 
	that, with Beckham, she wanted to make a commercially successful film 
	that appeals to a large, international audience. While the film skillfully 
	blends cultural and generational conflict, Beckham seems, at least on 
	one level, primarily geared toward a younger audience. Identify the themes 
	and scenes that have made the film a teenage crowd pleaser and, equally 
	important, see how the very form of the film—the way certain scenes are 
	filmed, the kind of music chosen, the camera work and editing—suggest a 
	younger audience as well. 
	
	 
	
	(5) Film Form and Film Content
	
	
As with every film worth its salt, the 
	way it is put together often (at least in theory) reinforces its very 
	themes: form and content are designed to develop a synergy of effect. To 
	spot this kind of synergy is not always easy, because film tends to lull us 
	often into passive viewing or simple entertainment. Film's very power of 
	illusion makes, paradoxically, "invisible" what is visible for all of us to 
	see: namely, that it is a highly stylized artifact, a collaborative project 
	of mobilized sight and amplified sound, among many others. With that caveat 
	in mind, rethink our conversations on camera work, lighting, music, and 
	editing, and try to identify scenes in Beckham where this synergy of 
	content and form (theme and technology) is particularly noticeable. Think, 
	for example, of those moments when shots or camera movement emphasize—that 
	is, render visually—social isolation or imprisonment. When does the 
	film switch to slow motion, and how do music and camera work complement 
	one another? These are some of the questions to keep in mind. 
	
	 
	
	Additional Pointers and Screening Suggestions
	
	
			
			Hollywood meets Bollywood.
			Like Monsoon Wedding, Beckham 
			fuses the conventions of Hollywood with Bollywood. Briefly research 
			or recap some of the conventions of Bollywood and Hollywood feature 
			films and see how Beckham merges those two genres. What might 
			this cinematic hybrid, perhaps, want to say on the level of filmic 
			form.
 
		
		Symbolic Moments. 
		As we know from our discussion in class, 
			films, like literature, often operate symbolically. If we think of 
			film and print as two different forms of text, we could say that, 
			while writing works with printed symbols (which readers nevertheless 
			have to visualize in their minds), film works with visual symbols, 
			that is, with its own medium-specific "language." Pay attention to 
			some of those visual symbols in Beckham and see what they are 
			trying to "show."
 
		
		Germany?. 
		All of Beckham takes place in England 
			except a brief sequences in Hamburg, Germany, where the Hounslow 
			Harriers take part in a tournament. Why would Chadha locate part of 
			her film (midway) in another country? Couldn't the HH (which also 
			happens to be the license plate for Hamburg: HH = Hansestadt 
			Hamburg) also have played a tournament somewhere in England, 
			Liverpool, say? Because Germany is hosting the upcoming soccer world 
			championship—hardly. To show that the emerging team is 
			internationally competitive—perhaps. However, what other reasons 
			could account for such a relocation of the film's terrain? What 
			precisely happens in Hamburg and why, one could argue, can these 
			developments only take place outside of England (though not 
			necessarily in Germany)? Speculate and theorize, as Picard says to 
			Data!