Man Push Cart On DVD

Ahmad, a Pakistani immigrant is the worker found on every street corner in every city. He is a man who wonders if he will ever escape his fate.

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MAN PUSH CART tells the story of Ahmad (Ahmad Razvi), a former Pakistani rock singer who ekes out a living selling coffee and donuts to morning commuters from his push cart in Midtown Manhattan. Ahmad supplements his income by selling bootleg porn DVDs, carefully saving his money to afford a place where he might be able to live with his estranged young son.

It is a harsh, often humiliating life, but Ahmad carries on with a stoic dignity and sensitivity, seemingly determined to find his way. Then the dull routine of his life is brightened by two developments: the arrival of a young Spanish woman (Leticia Dolera) working down the street in a newspaper kiosk; and an offer of assistance from a wealthy fellow Pakistani (Charles Daniel Sandoval), who remembers Ahmad’s former life as a rock star.

While Ahmad strives to pursue these two new possibilities at a better life, the film returns regularly to the act of him setting up his cart in the early morning darkness: his preparations for opening, the other immigrants who prepare the city in middle of the night, his exchanges with his customers as they buy coffee, tea and bagels from him. This gives MAN PUSH CART a deliberate rhythm as it explores the complex and hidden depths of the character, who we learn is desperately hanging on to his small dreams in the midst of grief and despair.

  • "
    Bahrani is a skilful, visual storyteller, shooting and framing the isolated Ahmad in ways that reinforce the theme of confinement.
    " —

    Total Film 4/5

  • "
    A sad, honest movie about the day-to-day courage and stoicism of decent people who cling to the lowest rung of the social ladder.
    " —

    The Observer

  • "
    An example of spare, slice-of-life indie cinema at its most unpretentious.
    " —

    Variety

  • "
    A delicate, rewarding and cliché-free enquiry into the complex heart of the lone immigrant experience.
    " —

    Time Out

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Awards

  • FIPRESCI Prize, London Film Festival, 2005

  • Audience Award, Best Actor, Thessaloniki Film Festival, 2005

  • Nominated for Independent Spirit Award, 2005