Vibrant "Slumdog Millionaire" Reaffirms Boyle’s Talent 
Christian Hamaker 
Crosswalk.com Contributing Writer 
(Tuesday, November 11, 2008) 
Release Date:  November 12, 2008 (limited)Rating:  R (for some violence, 
disturbing images and language)Genre:  DramaRun Time:  120 min.Director:  Danny 
Boyle, Loveleen TandanActors:  Dev Patel, Freida Pinto, Irfan Kahn, Madhur 
Mittal, Anil Tiwari, Anil Kapoor 
Director Danny Boyle made a splash in the 1990s with Trainspotting, a harrowing 
but energetic film about the perils of drug addiction. Following a couple of 
poorly received films (The Beach, A Life Less Ordinary), he directed an instant 
classic in an entirely different genre—horror—with the zombie story 28 Days 
Later. Rather than direct the sequel to that film (28 Weeks Later), Boyle 
turned his attention to Millions, an imaginative film centered on a child. He 
followed that with another wildly different film—the science fiction story 
Sunshine.
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Now Boyle, working with Indian directorLoveleen Tandan, has delivered something 
that is, once again, altogether different from his earlier work.Slumdog 
Millionaire,
an uplifting story about a young man triumphing on an Indian game show,
is a colorful, vibrant film that reaffirms Boyle as one of the more
interesting filmmakers working today. The film, which was rapturously
received at film festivals prior to its commercial opening, is not
quite as good as some of the early hype indicated, but it’s an
uplifting crowd-pleaser that should satisfy most audience members.
However, those audience members should be adults, not children, owing
to some of the film’s dark undertones and its “R” rating.
Dev Patel stars as Jamal, a game-show contestant who, in the film’s early 
moments, is poised to win the top prize on India’s version of Who Wants to Be a 
Millionaire? The pressure mounts with each correct answer Jamal gives, but when 
time
runs out on the cusp of his final question, requiring him to leave the
studio overnight, he is forcibly interrogated by an investigator (Irfan Kahn)
who demands to know whether Jamal is cheating. When his torture
of Jamal fails to break the game-show contestant, the interrogator
listens as Jamal explains his upbringing.
Jamal, a Muslim, loses his mother during a religious riot that leaves him to 
fend for himself, along with his brother Salim (Madhur Mittal) and a young 
girl, Latika (Freida Pinto).
These “three musketeers” experience immense hardships in an orphanage,
where the man in charge gouges out the eyes of some of the orphans
because blind beggars bring in more money. The boys break free of the
orphanage, but Latika is left behind. 


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