Friday, April 10, 2009

Slumdog Millionaire





Cast: Dev Patel, Anil Kapoor, Irfan Khan, Saurabh Shukla, Freida Pinto, Ankur Vikal

Director: Danny Boyle (Loveleen Tandan (co-director: India))

Music: AR Rehman

Cinematography: Anthony Dod Mantle

Editing: Chris Dickens

Genre: Crime/Romance

Runtime
: 120 min





Synopsis:

Jamal (Dev Patel) is an orphan from the slums of Mumbai. He gets to attend the game show ‘who wants to be a millionaire’ when he is 18. Surprisingly he starts giving the right answers till he gets into the final round. And all these questions have relevance to certain incidents happened in his life. The game show host and cops suspect that Jamal cheated in the show. The rest of the story is all about how he proves his innocence and wins his lady love that’s been playing hide and seek with him since his childhood.

slumdog millionaire

Actors:

The kids who did the roles of Salim, Jamal and Latika are adorable. They are the best in the film than the main leads. Among the notable Indian actors, Saurabh Shukla is the best. Ankur Vikal is excellent. Anil Kapoor is pretty natural as a wicked and biased host of the game show. After some point of time, we start hating him. Dev Patel is adequate. Irfan Khan played similar kind of roles earlier. Hence it is a cake walk for him.

Story – screenplay – direction:

The story of this film is adapted from a book Q & A written by an Indian author Vikas Swaroop. It is an interesting story that has two parallel plots interwoven into a game show. Direction of the film is brilliant. The screenplay is extraordinary. This film combines both arts and commerce. It has a highly realistic treatment to it with an undercurrent box office winning formula.

The following scenes are worth mentioning:

  1. The cop chasing the kids in slums

    2. Young Jamal jumping into shit pond to get an autograph of Amitabh.

    3. Young Salim asking his boss for 50 rupees when his boss asks him to be professional.

    4. Jamal acting as tour guide in Taj Mahal

    5. Darshan to Ghanashyam scene

    6. Jamal’s conversation with the blind in which he comes to know about the photo on 100 dollar bill.

    7. Salim taking the life of the guy who bothered him.

    8. Jamal trying to steal chapati on a moving train

    9. Jamal not choosing B as an answer for the penultimate question



Commercial screenplay payoffs in the film (typical Indian):

1. Spaced flashback narration: It has three threads of game show, police interrogation and flashback simultaneously run.

2. Love story: Jamal loves Latika unconditionally. She goes missing from him. And he finds her. She changes hands and is used by many men. But he stills love her. And all ends well in the end.

3. Salim character: Salim is the elder brother of Jamal. He is protective of his brother, at the same time egoistic. He behaves selfish at times and finally becomes an admirable person.

4. Three Musketeers Thread: The beginning of the movie has a teacher telling the students about ‘Three Musketeers’. Jamal considers his brother, himself and Latika to be three musketeers. The final question in the game show is about the name of the third musketeer. It was a beautifully written thread.

5. Mental recall: Jamal is recognized by the blind boy, Latita and Salim at different points of life journey.

6. Biased host of the game show: The host of the game show is a biased man. He does not want Jamal to win. He goes to the extent of apprehending Jamal to the cops. Hence the last two questions in the game show give huge commercial pay off when Jamal nails the host with the right answers though he does not know if it’s right.

7. Spirit of human triumph: Triumph is important than winning money. Hence he never backs out in the middle for money. Jamal risks it till the last round as it is all about the spirit of human triumph.

Some of the unconvincing points:

1. Three Musketeers lesson in a school attended by slum boys.

2. Jamal not knowing about Gandhi’s photo on Indian note.

The debate of India being shown as a pathetic country in this film:

When somebody is doing a film on a slum boy, it is bound to show the hard reality in slum areas. That does not mean that India has been projected in the wrong way. When somebody watched ‘City of God’ which shows the bad side of Brazil country, one expects it to be a poor country with little scope for improvement. But actually Brazil is one of the fastest growing economies in the world along with Russia, India and China (BRIC countries). India is not for the people who judge it by watching fictional movies. Hence, let’s not bother about it.

Other technical departments:

Background score by AR Rehman is peppy and energetic (especially the beat scored by kids chasing scenes in the initial part of the movie). Cinematography is excellent. Editing is superb with no dull moment. This film shows Mumbai slums in a magnificent way.

Analysis:

Slumdog Millionaire is an Indian film at heart with Indian emotions catering to Indian sensibilities. This film balances arts with commerce. It is also the best example of presenting a story in a realistic way without missing the formula. The best part in this film is the screenplay and most of the credit for this screenplay should go to the Indian writer Vikas Swaroop who wrote ‘Q & A’ book. Direction of the film is world class and narration balances the sensible humor and subtle tragedy. On a whole Slumdog Millionaire is a must see film and will put India on the world cinema map like Gandhi (1982) film.

The 8 awards Slumdog Millionaire has won are –

1. Best Picture

2. Best Direction

3. Best Original Song

4. Best Original Score

5. Best Film Editing

6. Best Sound Mixing

7. Best Cinematography

8. Best Adapted Screen Play

Now what made “Slumdog Millionaire” win so many awards in a single film is the million dollar question, the entire film world is going to wonder about. The answer is simple – a popular bottom line – a lad getting from rags to riches is a common dream, every one in the world, irrespective barriers, would like to have and this is told in the film in a fitting location like India neatly.

We can explain Best Direction by Danny Boyle, as he was impressed by the screenplay script of Simon Beaufoy (who also bagged the Oscar for Best Adapted Screen play which was based on a novel by an Indian Vikas Swarup). Best Film Editing by Chris Dickens also goes hand in hand with the shots expertly captured in film by Anthony Dod Mantle in winning Oscars.

A.R. Rehman, the Indian Maestro of film music, has bagged two awards for Best Original Score and Best Song JEYA HO HIT SONGS” and it was a foregone conclusion, as he made history in bagging the Golden Globe for his extraordinary work in Slumdog Millionaire. With so many departments winning accolades individually, there is no wonder Slumdog Millionaire has become the Best Picture to be awarded with Oscar to Producer Christian Coleson.





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