The Pool
The Pool
| 03 September 2008 (USA)
The Pool Trailers

A boy in abject poverty works in a hotel and becomes obsessed with a swimming pool in the opulent hills of Panjim, Goa, India. His life gets turned upside-down when he attempts to meet the mysterious family who lives at the house.

Reviews
dipesh parmar

Venkatesh (Venkatesh Chavan) is a self-sufficient eighteen-year-old, working for the hotel Arcadia in the city of Panjim, India, whilst saving up as much money to give to his mother on his frequent visits back to his village.Venkatesh's best friend and business partner is 11-year old Jhangir (Jhangir Badshah), who spend their spare time selling plastic bags. Along his morning laundry-delivering route, Venkatesh sits high up a tree looking over at a gleaming swimming pool in a wealthy mans home. He dreams of swimming in the pure blue water, the pool becomes an obsession to him as a symbol of the wealth he has never known. The house is owned by Nana (Nana Patekar), who returns with his self-centred teenage daughter Ayesha (Ayesha Mohan) to tend to the garden. But neither father nor daughter use the swimming pool, which confuses Venkatesh who has by now managed to get some extra work helping Nana in his garden. He becomes even more intrigued by Ayesha, who spends her days reading books which help to "screw your head up". She strikes a friendship with Venkatesh and Jhangir, their educational, class and caste distinctions put to one side whilst they enjoy each others company.Venkatesh and Jhangir's friendship (both local non-actors) was endearing and thought- provoking, their 7-year age gap rendered meaningless since both have had to grow up at a young age to survive. Their lack of education is all too evident, shaped by what they see not what they read, especially when Jhangir thinks everything outside of India is America. Initially, Venkatesh appeared slack and selfish, he wasn't even bothered when he inadvertently got his hotel co-worker fired. But we learn more about him and his past when he starts to open up to both Ayesha and Nana especially, developing a father-son relationship with him. This bond culminates in Nana making Venkatesh an offer that could change his life. We learn a lot about everyone, including Nana and Ayesha's strained relationship, and it becomes clear that the disused pool was central to everyone's lives.'The Pool' seems initially to tread the familiar coming-of-age stories we have all seen, but it becomes something much more tender, much more contemplative than you could imagine. Beautifully directed by the American director Chris Smith, known for such documentaries as 'American Movie' and 'The Yes Men', he covers a lot of difficult themes with little melodrama or pretension. Complex subjects such as education, the caste system and poverty are treated deftly and with scant moralising. The characters are naturalistic, their insecurities are teased out of them through subtle and poignant observations which you cant help but be moved by.Will Venkatesh understand and accept the wisdom behind Nana's story of the 100 Rupees, will it enslave him or empower him? Nana's offer of salvation requires Venkatesh to grow up and take a terrifying leap of faith, and he knows it. By the end, he may well have surprised us all.

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MarieGabrielle

This film is shown on Independent film channel, it's an interesting and relevant film. No great theories here, just Vankatesh a young destitute Indian boy trying to make it in the city of Panjim (his mother lives in the country and he brings money back to her and his two sisters).He works as a hotel boy and also with his friend Jhangir, tries to sell plastic bags to street vendors to make money on the side. From the activities of Venkatesh and his friend, as they try to get a mango down from the tree for lunch (.."Is this what Goans do for recreation?"... , his friend Ayesha asks). They befriend her because Venkatesh tells his friend he has seen a villa which has a nice swimming pool and no one ever uses it. Ayesha Mohan is very good here as the girl, she is more stylish and her father is a businessman from Bombay who works there and owns this villa in Goa.At any rate Venkatesh and Jhangir befriend Ayesha, they walk around Panjim, and he shows her the Portuguese architecture of an abandoned fort from years past.The photography is real without the fake embellished "gritty" style. We could see much of the same streets in Mexico, parts of South Florida or rural America. The street scenes are of food markets and hardscrabble life which is just accepted by Venkatesh as a day to day thing. Noteworthy are the scenes when he meets Ayesha's father who mentors him, has him help in the garden and eventually talks to him about going back to school.It's a shame these films do not get as much distribution in the U.S. It's a reflection of people just trying to survive. The initial screenplay apparently was based in Iowa, its the same situation there in this economy for many, so the theme is certainly relevant and effective. I'd love to see more of these films from Hollywood, and less based on comic book characters. 10/10.

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kris-murthy

"The Pool" is an excellent, slow paced, moving and an uplifting story of an impoverished teenager whose life changes from having an obsession with a swimming pool. I can easily say that the story being slow paced added an extra charm to the movie. The main actor, Venkatesh, could improve his camera presence a little. Nana Patekar(father), Ayesha (daughter) and Jhangir (friend) were spotless. I am not writing a spoiler content here, and would like to recommend this movie to everyone, not just for the ones who loves independent movies.To you Netflix, when did low budget movies become documentaries? I like documentaries, and surprisingly Netflix recommended this movie to me. I am glad they did! :-)

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reedsligar

I watched "The Pool" today, because I didn't have anything better to do. I was expecting it to be boring, but I was pleasantly surprised. The premise of the film is a lower class Indian boy who becomes obsessed with a pool. He offers to work for the family who lives there in order to swim in it without being a thief. As much as that sounds like a non-existing storyline, it really isn't. The characters develop throughout the film and you can really relate to them. I found the film quite entertaining and uplifting, even though the subject matter is depressing. The depiction of lower class India was perfect, you will now thank God that you don't have to scrub bathroom floors. The ending is incredibly touching, and it made me thankful that I can go to school. I highly recommend this film. - Reed S.

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