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Movie Review: Slumdog Millionaire

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    Cast: Anil Kapoor, Dev Patel, Frieda Pinto, Irrfan Khan, Saurabh Shukla

    Director: Danny Boyle

    Dharavi boy Jamal Malik, server of ‘chai’, keeper of secrets, is one of the wise. He’s learnt his wisdom on the streets, and he uses it to become a millionaire.

    Director Danny Boyle takes the bare bones of Vikas Swarup’s novel, and turns the film into an electric, visceral, kinetic feast, and an all-get-out entertainer. ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ is ‘Salaam Bombay’ on speed. Only it’s called Mumbai now.

    Blood, sweat, tears. And that other bodily fluid—shit— that no one likes to acknowledge, least of all mainstream meisters. Danny Boyle uses these elemental qualities to construct call centre ‘chaipau’ Jamal ( Dev Patel) , and his ‘bizarrely plausible’ ( in the delightful phrase of one of the characters) world, constantly teetering on the edge of collapse, constantly being shored by the grit and gumption of those who live in it. And gives us an unlikely hero who is a metaphor for our times. Yes, Jamal can.

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    So can Latika ( Freida Pinto), his childhood sweetheart, who is also a product of the same sewage and lineage that he and his brother Salim come from. Their journey to young adulthood, fraught with many dangers, is not new for those who’ve seen Bollywood’s tryst with slum-homeless kids being blinded and maimed by beggar cartels is one of Hindi cinema’s oldest saddest tales, along with fresh virgins being readied to be deflowered by the highest bidder. Boyle invests old tropes with a welcome matter-of-factness, and is willing to learn on the job : his inordinate glee at showing his young urchin wallowing in human excrement is overtaken by Jamal’s unchecked exuberance - the slumdog conquers both the smell and the moment.

    ... contd.

    Next12
    Disappointing movie reviewBy: Mohit Anand | 30-Jan-2009 Reply | Forward One would expect a paper like the Indian Express to not fall prey to the sway of popular hysteria of an over hyped film. I am an ardent fan of Danny Boyle and have no doubt enjoyed Slumdog thoroughly. However, I strongly feel that a lot of the adulation it has received is overdone and most people have gotten caught in the 'white man makes a film about India' hype surrounding the movie. Sadly, everyone seems to be conveniently avoiding discussion of the more lacking aspects of the movie. Its unfortunate that the Indian Express too has stuck to the trend and has avoided an intelligent critique.
    GlitchesBy: Sandipan Roy | 24-Feb-2009 Reply | Forward I Agree. Glitches:1. You can never view TajMahal from rail tracks2. A slum-boy lands in Taj and the very next scene strts talking English3. In a TV Show, the actor never travels daily from his house to the studio, specially in a city like Bombay.4. In call center, a chai-wala boy will never be allowed to handle calls. How come he can operate the computer with ease? Also, I feel the call-center flick was to highlight our BPO in poor state, where any lay-man can get a hand on the computer.
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