
Born in America, Marigold was the only child in the Lexton family. Her mom died when she was very young. She took an interest in acting and movies, much to the chagrin of her dad, who refused to do anything with her. She started acting in small budget movies as well sequels to popular releases such as Fatal Attraction, Basic Instinct amongst others. She landed a part in Kama Sutra 3 and had an eventful journey to Mumbai, India, and from there by taxi to Goa. It is here she fo... (Full plot summary below)
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Born in America, Marigold was the only child in the Lexton family. Her mom died when she was very young. She took an interest in acting and movies, much to the chagrin of her dad, who refused to do anything with her. She started acting in small budget movies as well sequels to popular releases such as Fatal Attraction, Basic Instinct amongst others. She landed a part in Kama Sutra 3 and had an eventful journey to Mumbai, India, and from there by taxi to Goa. It is here she found out that the movie has been canceled, and she has no money to return home as she was provided with a one-way ticket. She lands a singing/dancing role in Manoj Sharma's film, meets with Dance Instructor, Prem Rajput, who tells her that his grandma had predicted that he would meet and then get married to a woman named Marigold. She becomes attracted to him, even accompanies him to Jodhpur, Rajasthan, to his family home on the occasion of his sister, Pooja's marriage. It is here she will find out that Prem belongs to a royal family, and his marriage had already been finalized with a woman named Jhanvi, and no one in this family has ever dared to go against arranged marriages and tradition.
Leave your thoughts about Marigold.
| Spirituality and PracticeFrederic and Mary Ann BrussatThis first co-production between the United States and India starts badly and never recovers. |
| DVDTalk.comBrian OrndorfIt seems the only thing worse than a faulty culture shock comedy with zero charm is a faulty culture shock comedy with zero charm starring Ali Larter. |
| Empire MagazineKat BrownThe final half hour may lose its way but this remains a sassy and endearing romantic effort. |
| Chicago TribuneMichael EspositoIf you enjoy such Bollywood-style numbers, try to tune out the movie when the music drops off and you'll enjoy it more. |
| BBC.comJaspreet PandoharDespite boasting bags of colour, energy and top Bollywood actor Salman Khan, this cross cultural concoction falls halfway between the genres. |
| New York Daily NewsJack MathewsRest assured, contrived love will prevail. |
| Total FilmMatthew LeylandA sari attempt to hybridise Hollywood and Bollywood. |
| Film4Julia RaesideAs Prem's dad says of his son's feature film career, "I know nothing about dancing and the plots seem ludicrous to me." |
| Hollywood ReporterKirk HoneycuttBollywood fans will dismiss the mishmash as the work of an American director 'slumming' in a genre outside his own culture, and Western audiences unfamiliar with Hindi-language masala movies will find the whole thing puzzling. |
| London Evening StandardDerek MalcolmCarroll seems to be saying that we should regard Bollywood as a harmless part of Indian culture. |