Slumdog Millionaire
by Nick Schager
Posted: October 22, 2008
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inept has Hollywood become at delivering rousing inspiration that it's
something of a shock when a mainstream filmmaker (albeit one from
England, working in India) delivers an authentically affecting
crowd-pleaser. Slumdog Millionaire has all the trappings of an
awards-season schmaltz-fest, charting the story of an uneducated Indian
teenage street rat named Jamal (Dev Patel) whose amazing success on the
local telecast of Who Wants to Be A Millionaire lands him in
prison on suspicion of cheating. There, the night before he's to
compete for the ultimate cash prize, Jamal explains to a police
inspector (Irfan Khan) how he knew the answers to each question, with
flashbacks elucidating the alternately miserable and joyous life
experiences—living on the streets and on the run with self-interested
older brother Salim (Madhur Mittal) and swoon-worthy beauty Latika
(Freida Pinto)—that gave him the necessary pieces of information to
progress on the show. It's a memory-narrated structure that
superficially recalls that of The Usual Suspects. 

Rather than crime-drama trickery, though, Danny Boyle's film
(co-directed with Loveleen Tandan) roots itself in cynicism-free
celebration of fate, love and social camaraderie, conveying with big,
bold colors, extreme camera angles, and boisterous Indian music the way
in which Jamal's hardscrabble past has presciently informed his
potentially fortunate, famous future. Slumdog Millionaire argues that the most 
valuable knowledge is that learned first-hand,
though no intimate familiarity with the Bollywood cinema Boyle is
paying respect to is necessary to be swept up in the director's
rollicking, heartfelt saga. 

Orphaned after his mother is killed during an anti-Muslim riot,
seven-year-old Jamal (Ayush Mahesh Khedekar) is left to fend for
himself in a decidedly Dickensian Mumbai, where he, Salim and Latika
soon find themselves working for a Fagin-ish exploitative villain who
plans to make his beggar-workers more profitable by permanently
blinding them. The struggle of lower caste Indians in economically
developing Mumbai is richly captured with a mixture of sensitivity and
swagger, Boyle's cinematography so enlivened by the sights and sounds
of India's crowded shantytowns and bustling metropolis, as well as the
careening emotional fluctuations of his protagonists, that every
cockeyed shot, starburst hue and speed-freak pan—a music video-ish
aesthetic harmoniously in sync with individual and national
character—seems primed to explode. It's a style matched by Simon
Beaufoy's breakneck, expansive melodramatic script, which favors
outsized sentimentality and humor, the latter ably established by an
early sequence in which young, pint-sized Jamal braves a dip in an
outhouse pool of shit to nab an autograph from a beloved movie star. 

Boyle's is a fairy tale of upward mobility in which the indefatigable
Jamal's devotion to protecting and—after Salim becomes a murderous
gangster and turns traitor on his sibling—reuniting with Latika is
predicated on unwavering faith in love. That destiny favors the
pure-of-heart who are disadvantaged and romantic is an unabashedly
mushy concept, and yet Boyle's direction is ecstatic, enthralled by the
notion that kindness and generosity in the face of hardship have a way
of paying dividends in the most unexpected, circuitous ways. Jamal
faces down two gangsters, the police and a dastardly game show host on
his way to the program's 20-million rupee final question, an improbable
path forged by an unwillingness to accept social standing as fixed
that, eventually, unites him with the country at large. 

Slumdog Millionaire is fantasy yet its hyperactively
effervescent (if still personal, intimate) portrait of both ingrained
social barriers and altruism's ability to demolish them is genuine and
sweet. And although these qualities occasionally falter during some
overly broad comedic wrong notes, the film nonetheless possesses a
gripping aesthetic and emotional dynamism that can only be expressed,
finally, via prototypical Bollywood dance-choreography pageantry.

http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/film_review.asp?ID=3958

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