Helpon module sudoku_depth_first_solver: NAME sudoku_depth_first_solver - Sudoku Valid Boards Generator DESCRIPTION This module is using a recursive depth-first search approach to generate every valid board from a starting template.
Iâd forgotten how Bend It Like Beckham begins with a spoof BBC football commentary in which Gary Lineker, Alan Hansen and John Barnes wax lyrical about the silky skills of Jesminder âJessâ Bhamra. Itâs a fantasy, obviously, which is why her mum soon butts in to tell her off for ârunning around with all these men, showing [your] bare legs to 70,000 peopleâ. As openings go, itâs supremely silly and very British, perfectly setting the tone for what follows a relentlessly cheerful comedy about a British Indian girl torn between her love of football and her traditional Punjabi family. And how often do we get one of those? Erm, once. Twenty years the intervening decades, Gurinder Chadhaâs surprise hit starring Parminder Nagra and Keira Knightley â who, obviously, was the one who went on to become a global superstar â has matured into the highest grossing football film of all time. Which is amazing, even if you think Bend It Like Beckham is a bit glib, cliched, overreliant on stereotypes and dodgy when it comes to sexuality, which for 20 years I did. Until I rewatched it this week and was destroyed by its glinting moments of authenticity. The scene where all the Indian ammas and aunties pull out their mobile phones! The dancing at the wedding! But more of that It Like Beckham 20 Years On BBC Three, Miriam Walker-Khanâs lighthearted documentary examining the filmâs impact, also opens with ⌠Gary Lineker. Rewatching his cameo, he reckons he might have âoveracted a bitâ. He had no idea nor did I that Chadha was originally inspired not by Beckham but by Ian Wright. Apparently she saw him in a union jack flag and caught a glimpse of an evolving concept of Britishness in football. Which, 20 years on, has not evolved enough. âItâs surprising that things havenât changed too much in terms of the Asian presence in the game,â Lineker itâs off to the National Football Museum in Manchester to talk to some young sportswomen. Coach Ali Speechly, who was 19 when she first saw the film, remembers thinking âOh my God, this is me.â For freestyle footballer Kaljit Atwal, âitâs sad that itâs still relatable 20 years laterâ. Walker-Khan meets real-life Jesminder, Rosie Kmita the first south Asian woman to play in the Womenâs Super League WSL. Like Jess, she grew up playing football in the park, using jumpers as goalposts and facing the difficulties âthat come with being Asian and playing the gameâ. Jess may have been a great role model, Kmita and Walker-Khan agree, but she wasnât an up-and-coming BBC Sport journalist, is a bright and engaging presenter with lots to say on Bend It Like Beckhamâs intersectionality how it tackles race, class, gender and sexuality with a fleet-footedness that belies both the subject matter and times. Itâs a shame she doesnât interview Chadha thereâs only one clip of the director, and itâs from 2007. In its time, Bend It Like Beckham was criticised for being too upbeat and sidestepping the issues, but the Canadian sports journalist Shireen Ahmed points out that its multicultural positivity was sorely needed less than a year after 9/11. âThis film,â she says, âgave us a moment to stop apologising.âEssentially, though, this is a documentary about football. Itâs about how much the landscape has changed, with the WSL now regarded as the best womenâs league in the world. And itâs about how little it has changed, with south Asians remaining vastly underrepresented in womenâs football. Ahmed points out that, 20 years later, the local team on which the filmâs Hounslow Harriers is based is still made up of âa lot of white girlsâ.Iâve been on my own vexed journey with Bend It Like Beckham. I was 23 when it came out at a defiant, confused stage when a film like this seemed to have nothing to say to a British Asian like me. An Indian who did not grow up in an Asian community. Whose south Indian parents werenât strict like the caricatures we so rarely saw on the telly. Whose football-mad, sari-wearing Hindu mum would take weeks off work every time the World Cup was on. Bend It Like Beckham was yet another thing that made me feel like a bad years on, I see my response was forged both by the times and what Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie called âthe danger of a single storyâ; a shame born out of only getting to see one version of myself. I know, now, that there are as many ways to be British Asian as there are Asians in Britain. Which is why, 20 years later, and nearly two years after my wonderful and unusual mumâs death, watching Bend It Like Beckham made me cry. It was for me after all.
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A Lot or a Little? What you willâand won'tâfind in this movie. Where to Watch Videos and Photos Parents say 17 Kids say 37 age 11+ Based on 17 parent reviews March 20, 2021 This title has Great role models Too much swearing Too much drinking/drugs/smoking 1 person found this helpful. February 24, 2020 too mature for 10 year olds a lot of talk about "shagging" and bra fittings - wasn't a good fit for my 10 year old boy This title has Too much sex Too much drinking/drugs/smoking 1 person found this helpful. What's the Story? In BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM, Jess Parminder Nagra is the daughter of tradition-minded parents who've mapped her life's path from law degree to Indian husband to perfecting her ability to cook aloo gobi. They've also allowed her to develop her natural soccer-playing talents by turning a blind eye to her practices in the park with her best friend, Tony Ameet Chana. When Jess' older sister, Pinky Archie Panjabi, prepares to get married, their parents decide that it's time for Jess to settle down. But just as they're telling her to curb her sports pursuits, she's offered the opportunity to take her playing to the next level - and meets fellow player Jules Keira Knightley and her tough-love Irish coach, Joe Jonathan Rhys Meyers. Pulled in two different directions, Jess must learn how to balance her duties to her family - and to herself. Is It Any Good? Spunky and easy to watch, this feel-good movie bridges the distance between old country and new with the deft touch of a David Beckham penalty kick. For any girl whose athletic endeavors were ever questioned by conservative parents, Bend It Like Beckham is a color-drenched fairy tale where you know from the opening credits that the story will end in the "happily ever after" category for plucky Jess. Yes, this sunny little movie is about second-generation Indian families in England striving to maintain traditions that kids, more British than Indian, find increasingly irrelevant. But no matter your cultural background, the central theme that you should follow your bliss no matter the hurdle is universal. On the one hand, the story might not seem strikingly original, and the script's handling of LGBTQ+ material has not aged well to say the least. But the colorful tones of the movie, overlit action scenes, and genuine appeal of the characters - especially Jess - make this film enjoyable, engaging, and entertaining. Even if the answers seem a bit simple, it's nice to think that complicated relationships and challenges can be resolved with proper communication and the ability to make nice with others. Talk to Your Kids About ... Families can talk about why Jess feels like she can't talk to her family about her love of sports in Bend It Like Beckham. How does she defend her sneaking around? How does Jess' father's past experience playing cricket impact how he views his daughter's love of soccer? After Jess is called a racial slur, Joe tells her, "I'm Irish - of course I understand what that feels like." Does that seem believable? What are the differences between being an Irish man and a Punjabi Sikh woman in London? Are there similarities? How do the characters in Bend It Like Beckham demonstrate teamwork and courage? Why are these important character strengths? Movie Details In theaters March 12, 2003 On DVD or streaming September 30, 2003 Cast Pariminder Nagra, Keira Knightley, Jonathan Rhys Meyers Director Gurinder Chadha Studio Fox Searchlight Genre Comedy Topics Sports and Martial Arts, Friendship, Great Girl Role Models Character Strengths Courage, Teamwork Run time 112 minutes MPAA rating PG-13 MPAA explanation language and sexual content Last updated April 28, 2023 Did we miss something on diversity? Research shows a connection between kids' healthy self-esteem and positive portrayals in media. That's why we've added a new "Diverse Representations" section to our reviews that will be rolling out on an ongoing basis. You can help us help kids by suggesting a diversity update. Where to Watch Our Editors Recommend Best Soccer Movies and TV Shows Best Football Movies Common Sense Media's unbiased ratings are created by expert reviewers and aren't influenced by the product's creators or by any of our funders, affiliates, or partners. See how we rate
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Bend It Like Beckham" tells a simple story about a talented young person, Jesminder or Jess for short, who defies her cultural upbringing and her parents by playing soccer for a local girls team. It turns out that Jess is quite good, but that means nothing to her parents, who insist she quit the team once they discover she is playing.
Bend it like Beckham" is an exciting and meaningful movie for many different reasons. It highlights many important events that can be witnessed in real life today. One of the most crucial events that it highlights is the confrontation between two completely different religions. The movie is about a Sikh girl and her mission to fulfill one of
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