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Bridport Arts Newsletter
Film Tuesday 31 October, 2023 7:30pm

Land of Gold (PG) + recorded introduction by Writer and Director, Nardeep Khurmi

Tickets : £6 Adult, £5 concs., £4 Students/Film Society Members

Kiran Singh (Nardeep Khurmi), a 1st generation Punjabi-American, has just accepted a last-minute trucking job to Boston which causes a blow-up argument with Preeti (Pallavi Sastry), his 37-week pregnant wife, who admits to feeling abandoned.

En route to complete this “one final job,” Kiran discovers Elena (Caroline Valencia),  a 10-year-old Mexican-American stowed away in his trailer. After debating the merits of turning her to the police, Kiran deduces she might be undocumented, and instead resolves to shepherd Elena to her uncle in Boston despite putting his own livelihood in jeopardy.

As the pair ride across the changing American landscape, Kiran faces what it means to be a father and Elena learns how to trust again. They connect through family, dreams of the future, and a healthy debate over God’s existence, all while the ghosts of the past, racially charged encounters, and the threat of I.C.E. linger over their journey.

Land of Gold is the 2021 AT&T Untold Stories winner. AT&T’s Untold Stories program is a multi-year, multi-tier alliance between AT&T and Tribeca, along with the year-round nonprofit Tribeca Film Institute to develop underrepresented content creators. The program awards one million dollars, mentorship, and distribution to underrepresented filmmakers to produce their film and premiere it at the Tribeca Film Festival.

+ Recorded introduction by Writer and Director, Nardeep Khurmi

Facebook: landofgoldfilm
https://www.facebook.com/landofgoldfilm/
Website: landofgoldfilm.com
Instagram: landofgoldfilm
https://www.instagram.com/landofgoldfilm/

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Reviews

Land of Gold is a beautifully heartwrenching road trip film with an unpredictable ending.

Jeanine T. Abrahams, Tribeca Film Festival

Few debut features brim with such feeling, and even fewer reflect such an urgent need to solve a lifetime of inherited trauma in the span of a single film, as if their director may never get a second chance.

David Ehrlich, indieWire

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