Slumdog Millionaire (R) 
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The slumdog whiz kid Jamal is played as a young boy by Ayush Mahesh
Khedekar. Born into dire poverty, he prevails in the world by depending
only on his wits. 
Slumdog Millionaire 
/ / / November 11, 2008 
 Cast & Credits
Jamal Malik (older)     Dev Patel
Latika (older)     Freida Pinto
Salim Malik (older)     Madhur Mittal
Prem     Anil Kapoor
Inspector     Irrfan Khan
Jamal (middle)     Tanay Hemant Chheda
Latika (middle)     Tanvi Ganesh Lonkar
Salim (middle)     Ashutosh Lobo Gajiwala
Jamal (youngest)     Ayush Mahesh Khedekar
Latika (youngest)     Rubina Ali
Salim (youngest)     Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail

Fox Searchlight presents a film directed by Danny Boyle. Screenplay by Simon 
Beaufoy, based on the novel Q&A by Vikas Swarup. In English with Hindi 
dialogue. Running time: 116
minutes. Rated R (for some violence, disturbing images and language). 
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by Roger Ebert

Danny Boyle's
"Slumdog Millionaire" hits the ground running. This is a breathless,
exciting story, heartbreaking and exhilarating at the same time, about
a Mumbai orphan who rises from rags to riches on the strength of his
lively intelligence. The film's universal appeal will present the real
India to millions of moviegoers for the first time.
The real
India, supercharged with a plot as reliable and eternal as the hills.
The film's surface is so dazzling that you hardly realize how
traditional it is underneath. But it's the buried structure that pulls
us through the story like a big engine on a short train.

By the real India, I don't mean an unblinking documentary like Louis Malle's 
"Calcutta" or the recent "Born Into Brothels."
I mean the real India of social levels that seem to be separated by
centuries. What do people think of when they think of India? On the one
hand, Mother Teresa, "Salaam Bombay!" and the wretched of the earth. On the 
other, the "Masterpiece Theater"-style images of "A Passage to India," "Gandhi" 
and "The Jewel in the Crown."
The India of Mother Teresa still exists. Because it is side-by-side
with the new India, it is easily seen. People living in the streets. A
woman crawling from a cardboard box. Men bathing at a fire hydrant. Men
relieving themselves by the roadside. You stand on one side of the
Hooghly River, a branch of the Ganges that runs through Kolkuta, and
your friend tells you, "On the other bank millions of people live
without a single sewer line."

On the other hand, the world's largest middle class, mostly lower-middle, but 
all the more admirable. The India of "Monsoon Wedding."
Millionaires. Mercedes-Benzes and Audis. Traffic like Demo Derby.
Luxury condos. Exploding education. A booming computer segment. A
fountain of medical professionals. Some of the most exciting modern
English literature. A Bollywood to rival Hollywood.

As he approaches 20, Jamal (Dev Patel) rediscovers his childhood friend Latika 
(Freida Pinto), but they are star-crossed.

(Enlarge Image)
"Slumdog Millionaire" bridges these two Indias by cutting between a
world of poverty and the Indian version of "Who Wants to be a
Millionaire." It tells the story of an orphan from the slums of Mumbai
who is born into a brutal existence. A petty thief, impostor and
survivor, mired in dire poverty, he improvises his way up through the
world and remembers everything he has learned.

His
name is Jamel (played as a teenager by Dev Patel). He is Oliver Twist.
High-spirited and defiant in the worst of times, he survives. He
scrapes out a living at the Taj Mahal,
which he did not know about but discovers by being thrown off a train.
He pretends to be a guide, invents "facts" out of thin air, advises
tourists to remove their shoes and then steals them. He finds a bit
part in the Mumbai underworld, and even falls in idealized romantic
love, that most elusive of conditions for a slumdog.

His life
until he's 20 is told in flashbacks intercut with his appearance as a
quiz show contestant. Pitched as a slumdog, he supplies the correct
answer to question after question and becomes a national hero. The
flashbacks show why he knows the answers. He doesn't volunteer this
information. It is beaten out of him by the show's security staff. They
are sure he must be cheating.

The film uses dazzling
cinematography, breathless editing, driving music and headlong momentum
to explode with narrative force, stirring in a romance at the same
time. For Danny Boyle, it is a personal triumph. He combines the suspense of a 
game show with the vision and energy of "City of God" and never stops sprinting.

When
I saw "Slumdog Millionaire" at Toronto, I was witnessing a phenomenon:
dramatic proof that a movie is about how it tells itself. I walked out
of the theater and flatly predicted it would win the Audience Award.
Seven days later, it did. And that it could land a best picture Oscar
nomination. We will see. It is one of those miraculous entertainments
that achieves its immediate goals and keeps climbing toward a higher
summit.

http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081111/REVIEWS/811110297

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