試す - 無料

Pressure drop: 'The Harder They Come'

Mint Mumbai

|

February 24, 2024

‘The Harder They Come’ is a film of constant challenges and clashes, but it’s a musical at heart

- Uday Bhatia

Pressure drop: 'The Harder They Come'

Watching Bob Marley: One Love last week, I was distracted by a stray mention of Jimmy Cliff. The biopic was already exasperating me with its safety-first approach. I spent the rest of One Love intermittently dreaming of The Harder They Come. Same era, same Jamaican patois, but this 1972 film starring Cliff is as rough and exciting as One Love is polished and inert.

By 1972, Cliff was already a hit artist, with a handful of reggae standards-Many Rivers To Cross, the protest number Vietnam-to his name. Filmmaker Perry Henzell approached him with a script inspired by a gangster named Rhygin, who was a local sens together. Their central character, Ivanhoe, was changed to a musician who takes up the gun. They had a certain type in mind-"an anti-hero in the way that Hollywood turns its bad guys into heroes," Cliff recalled.

The Harder They Come opens with a near-bus collision, albeit a comic one. It's a fitting start, for this is a film of constant disagreements and challenges and clashes. The Jamaica we see is an endless series of shanty towns, where corrupt cops receive cutbacks from marijuana traders and all but a select few live in grinding poverty. Into this comes Ivan, a young man from the country. He's a singer with no money or belongings, a hair-trigger temper and a taste for expensive toys.

Mint Mumbai からのその他のストーリー

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Tax residency depends on your travel pattern and primary base

I am a salaried individual employed by an Indian company that allows me to work remotely.

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

IN INDIA'S KNITWEAR CAPITAL, A SURVIVAL ACT

Hit by Trump's tariffs, textile manufacturers in Tiruppur are renegotiating deals while scouting for newer markets

time to read

7 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Nestlé looks beyond Maggi, bets on India petcare boom

Nestlé SA sees India as a potential top-three global petcare market after the US and China

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Tata Trusts strife bares a void

Today's meeting may set the tone for the philanthropic entities' future, a year after the death of Ratan Tata

time to read

4 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

The dollar is far from dead and the yuan is not staging a coup

Greenback doomsayers got it wrong. The dollar's reign is not over

time to read

3 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Celebrating the snake in jewellery and art

An exhibition in Mumbai reiterates the power of the serpent motif in ornamentation and shines a light on Jaipur's wealth of gemstones

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Silver ETFs fired up by scarcity, festivals

Silver exchange traded funds or ETFs opened Thursday with a record 10-12% premium to spot prices, underscoring a scramble for the metal as festive buying, industrial use, and investor FOMO (fear of missing out) drove up demand against tight supplies.

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Without wills, death sparks a costly legal ordeal for NRIs

Wills help legal heirs bypass months of bureaucratic and logistical hurdles to claim family assets

time to read

4 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

AI BROKE THE INFO BOTTLENECK, BUT VALUE INVESTING STILL DEPENDS ON INSIGHT

In a Bloomberg column, Guy Spier argues that AI has ended the golden age of value investing by removing the old information edge.

time to read

2 mins

October 10, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

TCS preps big pivot to AI, data centres

At least $6 bn investment in 6 yrs; Q2 revenue beats expectations

time to read

3 mins

October 10, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size