A mystic-infused love story that follows a young couple's journey to India to collect their adopted baby.A mystic-infused love story that follows a young couple's journey to India to collect their adopted baby.A mystic-infused love story that follows a young couple's journey to India to collect their adopted baby.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 11 nominations total
Palomi Ghosh
- Urmi
- (as Paulomi Ghosh)
Kamalendu Banerjee
- Airport Official
- (as Kamalendu Danerjee)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe production shoot ran for about thirty-one days according to B Camera Operator and 2nd Unit Cinematographer Mark Lapwood.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Rashda: [on the phone] Fiona? Fiona...
Fiona Simmons: Rashda?
Rashda: Can you hear me?
Fiona Simmons: Yeah.
Rashda: Do you have a minute?
Fiona Simmons: I have the documents with me.
Rashda: I hope you know what you're doing.
Fiona Simmons: Absolutely. I'm fine taking them with me.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Making of 'The Waiting City' (2009)
Featured review
"You must act out of love, not desperation or need."
I've yet to see a movie set in India that wasn't a visual treat to watch, and The Waiting City definitely earns it's place on that list. The story, about an Australian couple come to Kolkata to adopt a child in the hopes that it will fix their strained relationship, is also interesting, even though I thought it stumbled into predictable, melodramatic territory at times. This is sort of an emotional coming of age story for the two main characters, both as individuals and a couple. The transition from who they are at the beginning to who they are at the end isn't exactly handled in the most organic way, but it is mostly believable.
The movie dabbles in ideas about faith and spirituality, as well, but in a very unfocused way.
I recommend The Waiting City to those interested in India, fans of Radha Mitchell or Joel Edgerton, and movie fans comfortable with subdued, personal storytelling that takes its time to get where it's going.
I've yet to see a movie set in India that wasn't a visual treat to watch, and The Waiting City definitely earns it's place on that list. The story, about an Australian couple come to Kolkata to adopt a child in the hopes that it will fix their strained relationship, is also interesting, even though I thought it stumbled into predictable, melodramatic territory at times. This is sort of an emotional coming of age story for the two main characters, both as individuals and a couple. The transition from who they are at the beginning to who they are at the end isn't exactly handled in the most organic way, but it is mostly believable.
The movie dabbles in ideas about faith and spirituality, as well, but in a very unfocused way.
I recommend The Waiting City to those interested in India, fans of Radha Mitchell or Joel Edgerton, and movie fans comfortable with subdued, personal storytelling that takes its time to get where it's going.
- lewiskendell
- Jul 4, 2011
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $3,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $500,641
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
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