American Made | Sikh American Documentary | Independent Lens
About the Documentary
“I wanted to tell the story of a father and a son,” says Writer/Director Sharat Raju. So begins American Made, a conflict between a father and a son, a reflection on assimilation versus identity, faith versus compromise. As the sun sets on the American desert and coyotes lay in wait, will someone stop to help? What measures will it take?
When a Sikh American family’s SUV breaks down on a remote desert highway during their all-American road trip to the Grand Canyon, they are confronted by more than the threat of an unfriendly terrain. Anant, an Indian-born Sikh who wears a traditional turban, sees this as just another challenge—an opportunity to save his family and tell great stories about their escape from danger.
His wife, Nageena, is not thrilled. Not only did she insist on taking the interstate but she is certain that this will be the last family trip after her eldest son Jagdesh moves to New York City. Spending time with her sons in a smoking car in the desert is not what she had in mind for their family trip.
Jagdesh just wants to get his cell phone to work so they can get some help, get on the road, get the trip over with, so he can start his new life. His younger brother Ranjit, like most teenagers, would rather be anywhere else than with his parents, and being stuck in the middle of nowhere is trying his patience.
Anant’s mechanical skills are limited and he can’t get the SUV to start, so he decides to wave down one of the cars that pass sporadically on the remote road. No one stops. The turban-clad Anant, undaunted, plans to try again. Ranjit isn’t so sure that anything his father will do can help. He says brazenly, “Dad, no one is going to stop, because you look like a terrorist.” “Is that what you think?” Anant replies, bewildered. Ranjit shrugs, “That’s what they think.”
Anant, who loosely quotes Robert Frost, “I took the road less traveled…” believes that in America one can have the freedom to be who they are and practice their faith and traditions. Yet to the young Ranjit, his father’s turban and beard represent a barrier to their family’s ultimate survival.
The son of Indian-born parents, American Made Writer/Director Sharat Raju and his family experienced the alienation that swept the United States post-September 11, 2001. Through the Singh family, stranded in the desert, Raju explores the conflict between faith, freedom, assimilation and modernization—themes that immigrants continue to struggle with when recreating family in a new world.
The Filmmakers
Sharat Raju
Sharat Raju received an MFA in Directing at the American Film Institute. American Made, his thesis film, earned both of the AFI’s top two honors in directing. The film has screened at numerous film festivals around the world, winning 17 international awards. Among the accolades are: Tribeca Film Festival Student Visionary Award; Angelus Award Grand Prize; San Diego Film Festival Best Short Film and British Academy of Film and Television Arts and Sciences (Los Angeles) Excellence in Short Filmmaking Award.
In September 2004, Sharat appeared in Esquire magazine as one of 20 young film school graduates to watch. Prior to graduate school he worked for acclaimed casting director Mali Finn on feature films including 8 Mile, Matrix Revolutions, and Matrix Reloaded. Sharat graduated from the University of Michigan with a degree in English and earned national awards as a college journalist. He is currently directing and producing the feature documentary, Divided We Fall: Americans in the Aftermath, a chronicle of hate crimes in the United States after Sept. 11, 2001. Sharat has re-teamed with his American Made crew to bring Divided We Fall to the screen.
Marcus Cano
After graduating from Brigham Young University in Utah with degrees in film production and business management, Marcus Cano worked as a producer for KBYU, a PBS television station in Utah, and then at the television newsmagazine Dateline NBC, in New York. He earned an MFA in Producing at the American Film Institute. His Masters thesis production, AMERICAN MADE, earned 17 international awards and screened at nearly 40 film festivals across the globe. Cano also created and operated the highly successful online casting company, HollywoodCasting.net. He is currently completing the feature documentary, Megarexia, and producing Divided We Fall: Americans in the Aftermath.
Full Credits
Written and Directed by
Sharat Raju
Produced by
Marcus Cano
Cinematography by
Matthew R. Blute
Edited by
Scott Rosenblatt
Casting by
Mali Finn, C.S.A.
Music composed by
Sagar Jethani
Cast
Peter Kenyon
Haskell Vaughn Anderson III
Crew
Associate Producer
Dax Craven
Production Manager
David Feiner
1st Assistant Director
Bob Lewis
2nd Assistant Director
Ryan Ole Hass
Script Supervisor
Elisa Forni
1st Assistant Camera
David Howard
2nd Assistant Camera
Anne Etheridge
Camera Loaders
Harry Charalambous
Luke Little
Property Master
Julie Simpson
Set Decorator
Erin Gruman
Costume Designer
Cari Sterling
Costume Supervisor
Tori Anderson
Key Makeup Artist
Martha Cuan
Gaffer
Jitsu Toyoda
Best Boy Electric
Tiffany Laufer
Key Grip
Lyn Moncrief
Dolly Grip
Mike Parry
Grips
Allison Kelly
Ji-Yong Kim
Production Sound Mixer
Andrew Gohn
Boom Operator
Lee Ascher
Teacher
Laura Wells
Casting Assistant
Omid Abtahi
Transportation Captain
Sara Mohazzebi
Meal Coordinator
Celez Suratos
Production Assistants
Monte Zajicek
Erik J. Hemans
Nicole Blute
Matt Shapiro
Film Runners
Adam Boyle
Larissa Dekert
Thomas Halloran
Caterers
Ted Cano
Shirley Cano
Lillie Cano
Post Production Sound Services
Digital Dreams Sound Studios
Supervising Sound Editor
Clancy Troutman
Dialogue Editor
Robert Jason England M.P.S.E.
Sound Design
George Nemzer M.P.S.E.
Foley Mixer
Todd Jasmine
Foley Artist
Karma Barber
ADR Mixer
Karma Barber
Re-Recording
Enterprise Post
Supervising Executive for Enterprise Post
Brian B. Murray
Re-Recording Mixers
Robbie Bartholomew
Todd Morrisey
Recordist
Donald Lyles
Traditional instruments performed by
Aalok Mehta
Assistant Film Editors
Shannon Baker
Steve Choe
Negative Cutter
Deborah McAfee
Dailies Timer
Earl Adams
Opening Title Design by
Charles Dulin / 342Media
Optical Titles by
Melrose Title
Funding for this program was provided by
Tonse Krishna Raju
Vidya Raju
Chandanasseri Natarajan
Janaky Natarajan
Balu Natarajan
Meenakshi Balakrishnan
Sreeram Natarajan
Gopal and Neetu Lalmalani
Marcus and Catherine Salinger
John and Virginia Blute, Sr.
Noelle George
Prem and Sujaya Rupani
Rohitkumar Vasa
Ted, Shirely, Tyson, and Lillie Cano
Terry J. Lawson
Special thanks
Eastman Kodak
Mali Finn Casting
Sikh Mediawatch
Resource Taskforce
Gurdware Sahib Vermont, Los Angeles. CA
Lorette Bayle
Larry Hazelwood
Brenton Earley
Prubjeet Khurana
Captain Singh
Color By FotoKem
Camera by Panavision
Camera Crane by JL Fisher
Camera Dolly by Chapman Leonard
Non-Linear Editing Equipment by Avid
Edited on Avid Media Composer
Videotape equipment courtesy of Sony Corporation of America
The characters and events depicted in this motion picture are fictitious.
Any similarity to any actual persons, living or dead is purely coincidental.
This Program was produced by The American Film Institute which is solely responsible for its content.
Copyright MMIII
American Film Institute
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7sa7SZ6arn1%2Beu6Wxz56lnZ2eqbmmutJom6ibpaKyr8DAq6Ceq1%2BWuqa%2ByJyYp6WRmbJw