Outsourced - Great Romantic Comedy Film

After his entire Seattle call-center department is outsourced to India, Todd succeeds in hanging onto his job only by agreeing to go to India to train his own replacement. With such bemusing cross-cultural comedy at hand, can love be far behind? Culture-shocks and obvious stereotypes are wittily sidestepped in this warm and charming crowd-pleaser.

Jeffcoat offers a hilarious look at business relations between America and India. After his entire department is outsourced, an American novelty products salesman (Josh Hamilton) heads to Gharapuri to train his replacement.

http://www.outsourcedthemovie.com/

Starring - Ayesha Dharkar, Josh Hamilton

Re: Outsourced - Great Romantic Comedy Film

Outsourced
By EDDIE COCKRELL

Josh Hamilton finds love in India with Ayesha Dharker when he loses his job to overseas competish in ‘Outsourced.’

A ShadowCatcher Entertainment presentation of a ShadowCatcher Entertainment, Tom Gorai production. (International sales: Film Finders, Los Angeles.) Produced by Tom Gorai. Executive producers, David Skinner, George Wing. Co-producer, Gwen Bialic. Directed by John Jeffcoat. Screenplay, George Wing, Jeffcoat.

With: Josh Hamilton, Ayesha Dharker, Larry Pine, Asif Basra, Matt Smith.
(English, Hindi dialogue)

A Seattle call center manager discovers life and love in India when he’s “Outsourced.” Not to be confused with Columbia’s announced Vince Vaughn-Owen Wilson starrer of the same title due in 2008, this unaffected charmer treats a hot-button contempo issue with old-fashioned grace and benevolent wit, rendering it a sure-fire word-of-mouth crowd-pleaser at fests, in first-run and on ancillary.

Thirty-two-year-old Todd Anderson (Josh Hamilton) manages the order filling call center of Western Novelty: “We sell kitsch to rednecks,” he explains, with typical efficiency. Abruptly told by boss Dave (Matt Smith) that his entire department is being outsourced to India, the Seattlite finds himself persuaded to travel there and train his replacement.

Todd’s the kind of guy who dons a suit and tie for an international flight, so the heat and chaos of Mumbai (formerly Bombay) proves somewhat of a shock. Making his way by crowded train to the village of Gharapuri, he’s met by Purohit N. Virajnarianan (Asif Basra), a local eager beaver who plans to parlay the job he’s swiping from Todd into a secure arranged marriage but is so unfamiliar with English slang he’s no idea what the word “schmuck” means.

In a half-built concrete bunker, wrangling a staff alternately puzzled and appalled by such product items as Burger Brander and plastic Cheeseheads, Todd labors to teach his charges the American way of life and bring the all-important MPI–“minutes per incident”–of each phone order to the six decreed by the home office (it stands at over twice that when he arrives).

Through the business skill, sincere friendship and eventual love of employee Asha (Ayesha Dharker), Todd learns to embrace his new surroundings and marshal the available forces to get the job done.

Inspired by helmer John Jeffcoat’s semester abroad in India, knowing script was co-written with George Wing, whose other romantic comedies include “50 First Dates” and, for MGM, a new version of Billy Wilder’s “Avanti!” Together, they’re smart enough to eschew character quirkiness in favor of location flavor, letting the environment set the pace and dictate the relationship.

A tremendously genial screen presence who manages to portray both puzzlement and proficiency, New York stage vet Hamilton is the perfect aud surrogate, a stranger in a strange land who surprises himself with his own adaptability. The troubled protagonist of “The Terrorist” and Queen Jamillia in “Star Wars: Episode II–Attack of the Clones,” Dharker now proves herself equally adept at light romantic comedy as the capable, passionate Asha. The chemistry between the two is natural and unforced. Vet Larry Pine is fine in a single scene as an American offering sage advice to the frustrated Todd.

Tech contributions are streamlined, with visual package falling just short of TV gloss and production design presenting a rumpled yet appealing atmosphere. Though shot on 35mm, Toronto screening caught was projected digital vid.

Camera (color, 35mm-to-HDCam), Teodoro Maniaci; editor, Brian Berdan; music, BC Smith; music supervisors, Jeffcoat, Tom Gorai; production designer, Fali Unwala; costume designers, Heidi Bivens, Veera Kapur; sound, Dave Howe; assistant director, Kapil Sharma; casting, Ellen Chenoweth, Kathleen Chopin, Uma da Cunha. Reviewed at Toronto Film Festival (Contemporary World Cinema), Sept. 13, 2006. Running time: 102 MIN.

http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117931647.html?categoryId=31&cs=1

Re: Outsourced - Great Romantic Comedy Film

^^ This should have been the perfect Adam Sandler movie

Re: Outsourced - Great Romantic Comedy Film

It’s a fun movie to go to — it gets people laughing and clapping and cheering.