"The theme song of the film, composed by A R Rahman and sung by Sukhvinder 
Singh, is one of the film's highlights. It is used, for the second time in the 
film, at the very end when the newly minted millionaire (a brilliant Dev Patel) 
and his newly reunited girlfriend (newcomer Freida Pinto) are joined by dozens 
of children in a glorious dance number."
 
 
---------------------------------------------
 
As he was dropping me at the Varsity Theatre in Toronto, the cab driver asked 
me what film I was going to see at 8 am. I said it was Slumdog Millionaire.
 

"And it starts at 8 in the morning?" he asked. "What kind of a film is it?"
 

I told him that the press show would start at nine.

 
"You are crazy," he said, in a good way.  "Why are you here so early then? You 
don't have to buy tickets for the press shows.'

 
I said it is not uncommon for journalists to turn up early for a much discussed 
film at the film festival -- in this case, the Toronto International Film 
Festival (TIFF). By the time I reached, there were already more than 100 people 
in the line. By the time the film started, every seat at the 580-seat theatre 
was taken, and there were more than 50 reporters waiting outside. They were 
hoping to grab a seat in case people walked out a few minutes after the film 
started (not an unusual occurrence at the film festivals that screen half a 
dozen films simultaneously starting around 9 am).
 

But there were no walkouts, and the film -- about a teenager from the slums, 
who becomes a champion of the Indian version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire 
and immaterially arouses the suspicion of a police inspector -- received a 
rapturous applause. Twice.
 

Oscar buzz for the film, which has an all-Indian cast led by Anil Kapoor 
[Images], has already started.

 
'Fox Searchlight will try to mount another derby ambush like it did over the 
previous two years with those crowd-cheering indies Little Miss Sunshine and 
Juno,' The Hollywood Reporter wrote. 'Upon wild audience huzzahs to Slumdog 
Millionaire at the Telluride Film Festival where the film opened before coming 
to Toronto, the studio is excited about this tale. It is planning 'an elaborate 
campaign for the smart but feel good dramedy.''


 
Veteran festival-goers know too well that the critics and reporters at the 
major film festival are often very touchy about applauding a film, and just 
about 10 percent of the more than 250 feature films shown at the Toronto 
International Film Festival get the kind of ovation from the press that the 
Boyle directed comic drama Slumdog Millionaire received.
 

Some of the reporters had come to see the film because they were the admirers 
of Boyle's trendy hits Trainspotting and 28 Days Later. Some had read about the 
new film and had been surprised that the London-based filmmaker had made the 
film entirely in India, with seasoned and new artistes. And that the film was 
based on a well-known novel Q and A by Vikas Swarup that was published in the 
West over two years ago.
 

Anil Kapoor -- in a career rejuvenating performance -- plays the manipulating 
and egotistical host of the millionaire television show  in the new film and 
Irrfan Khan [Images], the police investigator, who wants to know if the slum 
boy is cheating in the competition.
 

The film is often gritty and violent but the story of two boys and a girl, who 
are orphaned in the Bombay riots and who look out for each other (at least for 
most part), is full of heart wrenching moments and ends on a life affirming 
note. The theme song of the film, composed by A R Rahman and sung by Sukhvinder 
Singh, is one of the film's highlights. It is used, for the second time in the 
film, at the very end when the newly minted millionaire (a brilliant Dev Patel) 
and his newly reunited girlfriend (newcomer Freida Pinto) are joined by dozens 
of children in a glorious dance number. The film uses Hindi extensively but 
about half of the dialogue and comments are in English.
 
The movie also uses a new song from M I A, who grew up in London [Images] after 
living in a refugee camp in Tamil Nadu with her mother fleeing the civil war in 
Sri Lanka [Images]. Boyle has said she was a 'gift' to the film's soundtrack.
 
The film, one of the most popular movies at TIFF, opens in North America in 
November but it will be going to a number of film festivals before that. It 
will be the closing film at the London Film Festival. Boyle will be appearing 
at the festival to introduce the film, and give a career interview as part of 
the LFF's Screen Talks series.
 
At the public screenings of the film in Toronto, many people in the audience 
were cheering the film. It surely is one of the most popular films shown in the 
festival. Ecstatic reviews have already appeared in such trade publications as 
Screen International.
Fox Channel had a special note about the film which will be released in North 
America through Fox Searchlight. 'Believe it or not, a famous game show figures 
in another potential Oscar film for 2009,' the commentary said. 'Danny Boyle's 
stunning India-based film, Slumdog Millionaire is so sensational that the 
audience was hooting and hollering 'Bravo' on its Toronto premiere. Simon 
Beaufoy has constructed a beautiful story, using the Indian version of Who 
Wants to Be a Millionaire? as a story hook.'
Boyle, who is in his early 50s, said at a press conference that while he was 
determined to cast Slumdog Millionaire in India, he could not  find the right 
'loser'  for the leading role.
 
"We just couldn't find anybody. The guys there just didn't have the feel of 
being a loser really," said the director, who has been hearing stories about 
India from his childhood from his soldier father, and who was briefly stationed 
in India over six decades ago.
He then chose Dev Patel, a young actor from London, known for his role on the 
popular and controversial British TV series Skins which has a big following in 
America and Australia [Images], too.
 
As he faces the questions from the host (Anil Kapoor), the flashbacks take us 
to the tumultuous growing years for the whiz kid and his buddies. The film 
reveals how he came to know the answers and how he rose from being an underdog 
to a near celebrity.
 
"I love the underdog idea," said Boyle. He feels though his new film is set in 
a very different milieu from the one seen in his other films, it has an 
universal appeal. "Here is a young man you can root for, believe in and belong 
to as he chases this dream," Boyle added.
 
The film's appeal is enhanced by the quality of the performances by the 
newcomers. 'A cast of incredibly talented young people including newcomers Dev 
Patel and the shining beauty Freida Pinto,' wrote Roger Friedman of Fox News. 
'Neither of these kids has made a movie before or been to the United States. 
All of that is about to change. Handled properly, Slumdog could be the surprise 
of this film season. It's ebullient and moving, while at the same time quite 
thrilling.'
 
Slumdog was shot in Mumbai in the slums, train stations and posh buildings, and 
screenwriter Beaufoy (the Oscar nominated winner for The Full Monty') said his 
script used the location to recall the kind of bustling city life once depicted 
by Charles Dickens in such novels as Oliver Twist and David Copperfield.
 
'Mumbai is the modern version of Dickensian London,' he told Canadian Press. 
'It gives a writer access to the extreme level of storytelling that you get in 
Dickens. You get humour and tragedy and squalor and all those things packed in 
a very small space.'

http://inhome.rediff.com/movies/2008/sep/09slum.htm
 




      

Reply via email to