Slumdog Millionaire: A must see. By Ron
Centeno<http://www.ojr.org/ojr/people/roncenteno/>
Posted: 2009-01-19
When we talk about great movies, we oftentimes refer to those that are
hugely budgeted with elaborate sets, high-tech production, and ridiculously
high-paid Hollywood actors. In the movie Slumdog Millionaire, this is not
the case.

The movie was filmed in India with barely known Bollywood actors in the
lead. One example is Dev Patel who played the lead role, Jamal Malik. Patel
earned the part out of his unassuming looks. His cinematic features pale in
comparison to the generally hunky and hero-like Bollywood stars.
Nevertheless, Patel is a cast member of a British television ensemble drama
Skin prior to this movie. The other is Freida Pinto who played the role of
Latika, Jamal's love interest. Pinto had not starred in a feature film
before. She is a commercial model by profession.

One can only guess that while the movie's projected cost was $15 million, an
award-winning movie with a small budget such as this defies the conventional
wisdom in the movie industry. To its credit, the film pulled down four
coveted 2009 Golden Globe Awards including Best Motion Picture – Drama; Best
Director – Motion Picture – Danny Boyle; Best Screenplay – Simon Beaufoy;
and Best Original Score – A. R. Rahman.

Slumdog Millionaire is based on a novel Q and A by Vikas Swarup and is put
into a script by Simon Beaufoy. The backdrop used for the scenes is nothing
but redolently panoramic landscape that captures the real-thing-slum in the
heart of Mumbai. The filthiness inside this shanty town is enough to turn
the viewers' stomach upside down. The grossness surrounding the squatter
commune creates an impression of a third-world India prior to country's
ascent to one of the world's fastest rising economies next to China.

The movie's plot is typical to countries where minorities, in this case the
Muslims in a predominantly Hindus, are treated heavy-handedly. Children of
Islamic descent who hail from the shanties bear the brunt of India's
discriminating authorities.

Jamal Malik, a former street child from Mumbai had the displeasure of being
a contestant in Kaun Banega Crorepati, an Indian version of Who Wants to be
a Millionaire. Armed without education, he stunned the show's million avid
viewers by making it to the final question worth twenty million ruppies. As
such, Prem Kumar, the host of the show suspected Jamal of cheating which
resulted in a police interrogation. Under custody, Jamal detailed an
explanation of how he knew the answers that walked us through to the
chronological events of his sorry-life in the slum areas.

The ensuing scenes from beginning to end of the movie were masterfully
directed by Danny Boyle. The film is simply riveting which hoisted Simon
Beaufoy to earn the coveted award in scriptwriting.

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film four stars, stating that
it is, "a breathless, exciting story, heartbreaking and exhilarating". Todd
McCarthy of Variety, praises the script as "intricate and cleverly
structured". Finally, Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times describes the
film as a "Hollywood-style romantic melodrama that delivers major studio
satisfactions in an ultra-modern way".

Indeed, Slumdog Millionaire is a movie that might bring the executives of
the giant film outfits into the drawing board to focus more on the script
rather than the big budget to earn critical acclaim.

http://www.ojr.org/ojr/people/roncenteno/200901/1624/

-- 
regards,
Vithur

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