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A age to India
A age to India has theme of a friendship in British colonial India between an Indian doctor, an Englishwoman engaged to marry a city magistrate, and an English educator.
















16 June 1938, Hampstead, London, England, UK

9 February 1936, Liverpool, England, UK

8 January 1929, Malerkotla, Punjab, British India

9 July 1936, Greenock, Renfrewshire, Scotland, UK

2 April 1942, Patna, Bihar Province, British India

1959, England, UK

13 November 1952, Bahawalpur, Pakistan


19 May 1939, London, England, UK

8 August 1928, British India

1927, Thanet, Kent, England, UK




1946, Gujrat, India

23 April 1955, Perth, Western Australia, Australia


2 April 1914, Marylebone, London, England, UK


6 November 1949, London, England, UK


25 October 1956, Burma

22 December 1907, Croydon, Surrey, England, UK

15 June 1917, Kampur, India

4 March 1922, Amreli, Bombay Presidency, British India



March 19, 2008
Lean's swan song is an intelligent adaptation of Forster's complex novel about racil prejudice and sexual repression, flaunting wonderful perfromances from the two leads, Judy Davis and particularly Dame Peggy Ashcroft.
November 06, 2007
The film, for all Lean's innate elegance, is strangely remote and unmoving. It could easily have been a Merchant-Ivory film.
November 06, 2007
Lean does an excellent job of conveying the repressive nature of British society captured in the novel.
April 21, 2008
Lean's visually appealing film frequently connects as a social satire and a mystical melodrama of transgressors looking for footholds in psychically threatening territory.
March 08, 2008
Epic, briliantly photographed, but slow David Lean drama.
October 23, 2004
Forster's novel is one of the literary landmarks of this century, and now David Lean has made it into one of the greatest screen adaptations I have ever seen.
April 17, 2008
Lean isn't on his A-game here, but the film isn't bad.
November 06, 2007
David Lean's studied, plodding, overanalytic direction manages to kill most of the meaning in E.M. Forster's haunting novel of cultural collision in colonial India.
May 20, 2003
The film is very much 'a full theatrical meal,' and one that conveys a lot of 'the multiplicity of life' one seldom sees on the screen these days.
April 24, 2008
Regardless of what one thinks of David Lean and his old fashioned style, the results here - save perhaps for the casting of Alec Guinness as a Hindu professor - are exquisite.
June 24, 2006
Not for literary purists, but if you like your entertainment well tailored, then feel the quality and the width.
November 06, 2007
An impeccably faithful, beautifully played and occasionally languorous adaptation of E.M. Forster's classic novel.