By far, this is one of the good review of the film.
 
I have seen this film and i had exactly same thoughts as the author of this 
article had, about the loopholes and the treatment.
The film is fine and good enough, if it has not been hyped much. But after all 
this superlatives, one would expect really BIG. and there this film falls 
short, a lot.
 
Indian filmmakers can potray India and realism in a much better way, IMO.
Anyways, my personal thoughts.


Regards
Kamal Aakarsh Vishnubhotla.
 
http://kamal-aakarsh.blogspot.com 
 

--- On Sat, 1/10/09, Vithur <vith...@gmail.com> wrote:

From: Vithur <vith...@gmail.com>
Subject: [arr] Slumdog Millionaire is just a masala film - Rediff.
To: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Date: Saturday, January 10, 2009, 10:26 PM







Blame it on the hype. 
The reviews -- mainly from the United Kingdom and the United States, where the 
film was released first -- for Slumdog Millionaire [Images] compete with each 
other in discovering superlatives. It is being billed as the movie of the year 
gone by, and has catapulted its protagonists Dev Patel and Freida Pinto into 
competing with Oscar heavyweights in major award nominations. 
So expectation is par for the course, I hope you will agree.
But after watching director Danny Boyle's attempt at encapsulating the India 
story with a miraculous tale, I for one was majorly under-whelmed.  
Let me try to explain why. 


Also Read: Showcasing Slumdog Millionaire
And for those of you who want to watch the movie first unencumbered by 
premature knowledge of plot turning points, please click away to another page, 
because it is impossible to critique this particular film without giving away 
what classify as 'spoilers'.
So where was I? The film. Do you remember a recent movie that had the 
tagline -- 'he was arrested for raping his daughter'? Well, Under-trial too was 
based on 'real events'. 
The point I am trying to make is that a film about real events need not end up 
real enough, or engaging enough. That is precisely what Slumdog Millionaire 
suffers from, IMHO.
The premise is brimming with potential. A slum kid rises above fate to win Kaun 
Banega Crorepati -- the sets are ditto, as is the background music for the 
show -- and the love of his life. He is helped by destiny, as each of the 
questions on the quiz show is linked to an event in his life. Wow. 
But the execution falls very flat because of two basic flaws: The language 
barrier, and a wishy washy story line. 
It starts off with Jamal Malik being given the 'third degree' in a police 
station because the cops are sure the slum kid has cheated on the game show. 
I agree custodial torture is not limited to Abu Ghraib. But what is not taken 
into account is the usual fall guy in 21st century India -- the media. If a 
'slumdog' -- as the police inspector (Irrfan Khan [Images]) calls Jamal -- were 
to be poised to win Rs 20 million on KBC and if the country knew it (as it does 
in Slumdog), I doubt he would be subjected to any other grilling apart from 
that most profound of television journalism questions: "Aapko kaisa lag raha 
hai?" (How are you feeling?). 
And if he was arrested for cheating, it would be an even bigger story, with 
reporters grilling the police and PYTs (pretty young things) doing PTCs (piece 
to cameras, the bit where the reporter faces the camera and signs off with 
usually insights like: 'What will happen next remains to be seen. With 
cameraperson in Mumbai [Images], , ') in front of Jamal's slum.
Instead, Jamal narrates to the police inspector just how he knows the answer to 
each question.
So we flashback to him as child diving into potty -- isn't once enough, given 
that Boyle's gritty and edgy Trainspotting featured such a nauseating scene 
too? -- to get Amitabh Bachchan's [Images] autograph. 
For all the Amitabh-crazed fans, maybe the megastar does oblige children caked 
in faeces; be sure to try it the next time. 
More such flashbacks reveal the scars life has inflicted on Jamal and his 
brother Salim. The Bombay riots that orphaned Jamal; how he and his brother 
Salim met Latika, the love of Jamal's life, as children; the underworld don who 
has children's eyes gouged out so that they can earn more as beggars; how Jamal 
and Salim escape him and land up in Agra [Images]; how they come back; how 
Jamal and Salim and Latika are thrown apart; and how, eventually, love conquers 
all. 
Again, fantastic -- and seemingly real -- premise; but shoddy experience. 
For starters, the kids (who deliver heart-warming performances, faring way 
better than those who play their adult avatars) and his brother speak in Hindi, 
and suddenly when they turn adolescent they start talking in pucca English. Huh?
Arre, that's because the film is meant for a world audience, and you can't have 
an entire film in subtitles, you might say. Fine, but then why do the police 
officers have to speak 'Indian' English and why does the 'slumdog' have an 
accent?
And no, a semi-literate office help in a call centre does not develop an accent.
In fact, a lot of the 'how he knows the answers' flashbacks are too contrived. 
Sample this, Jamal knows Samuel Colt invented the revolver because Salim got a 
gun -- it is never explained how -- and shot dead the vile man who heads the 
beggars' racket. In my hometown, the pistol goes by monikers like 'machine' in 
the netherworld; I doubt the average underaged Mumbai underworld operative 
knows a Colt 45, or Samuel Colt. The first gun is usually what is called a 
'country' revolver. 
And then there is the stereotyped, half-baked, black and white 
characterisation, almost bar none. For example, Prem Kumar (Anil Kapoor 
[Images]), the KBC host, is the typical villain who taunts the chaiwallah on 
his show; and the audience joins in with jeering laughter. Agreed, slum 
children get life's rawest deal, but not on live television. More likely, 
sugary treatment on the show, and bitter backstage. 
It is also not explained just why Prem goes after Jamal with such malice, 
beyond a muttered 'It's my show'.  
I can go on and on -- like point out that call centres serving customers in 
Scotland don't keep telephone directories of Indian cities accessible at the 
click of a button, and that mobile phones are not listed in telephone 
directories yet (that's how Jamal finds his brother again) -- but the point is 
that Slumdog Millionaire is miles short of what I had expected it to be.
The really key events, the struggles of survival, are glossed over, and instead 
we get montage (albeit beautiful) shots hurrying towards a climax that leaves 
you untouched. A R Rahman's music is good, but not the master's best. But then, 
maybe on second hearing it will grow on you.
But -- maybe it's just me -- you never really feel for the adult Jamal. Maybe 
it has something to do with the acting.
I have no problems with the 'West' taking up themes of poverty and highlighting 
the real India. I can completely understand a foreigner being obsessed with the 
filth and the poverty -- I too was stunned by the plight of the homeless in New 
York -- of India. I thought Slumdog is brilliantly shot, and I am willing to 
forgive Ram dressed as a mix between Shiva and Krishna in a foreign film. 
But I do have a problem with a story that pretends to be real when in reality 
it is just a masala film -- the kind we churn out by the dozens in Bollywood. 
Yes, Slumdog Millionaire is just superficial fluff, mainly because of its 
gaping plot holes. It should have been much better researched, and they really 
should have stuck to one language.
Maybe the makers -- and half the world, apparently -- believe they have married 
Bollywood escapism with Western sensibilities, but it is not a match made in 
cinema heaven. It is more along the lines of 1970s Bollywood tear-jerkers, the 
kind where the hero transforms from street urchin to gang lord in one running 
shot and where long-lost brothers are reunited by tattoos.
Blame it on the hype.http://www.rediff. com/movies/ 2009/jan/ 09review- 
slumdog-milliona ire-sumit. htm

-- 
regards,
Vithur



 














      
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