Uncurry is a provocative and deeply personal documentary that dismantles one of the most widely accepted myths in global cuisine: the idea of “curry.” With clarity, humour, and cultural urgency, the film argues that “curry” is not an authentic category within Indian or South Asian cooking, but a colonial constructs an oversimplified label imposed by the British Empire to flatten the vast diversity of regional food traditions.
The journey begins in Melbourne, where the filmmaker interrogates menus, supermarkets, and everyday language, revealing how deeply the word has embedded itself into modern food culture. From there, the film travels to India, moving through kitchens, homes, and bustling food markets where no one cooks “curry” but instead prepares dishes defined by region, memory, technique, and language. Each meal tells a story that resists categorisation.
The documentary then arrives in London, the historical heart of the term’s global spread. Here, Uncurry uncovers how “curry” was popularised during colonial rule and later rebranded within the UK’s restaurant culture. It explores the pivotal role of Bangladeshi migrant communities particularly from Sylhet who built the UK’s “curry house” industry, reshaping identity, survival, and belonging through food, even while working within a misnamed culinary framework.
Through intimate conversations with chefs, historians, migrants, and home cooks, Uncurry exposes how language can erase nuance, but also how it can be reclaimed. The film does not simply reject the word it challenges audiences to rethink what it represents.
At its heart, Uncurry is not just about food. It is about power, migration, memory, and naming. And yet, across continents and contradictions, one truth remains: food itself shared, cooked, and tasted becomes the most honest form of communication, capable of breaking myths and reconnecting us to deeper cultural truths.