The *minute* this lands on DVD, it's mine.




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 Subject : [scifinoir2] Slumdog Millionaire Soars

 Date : Sun, 18 Jan 2009 16:42:18 -0000

 From : "ravenadal" <ravena...@yahoo.com>

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


Slumdog Millionaire Soars

Slumdog Millionaire is an artful mash up of Oliver Twist, East of 
Eden, It's a Wonderful Life, The Shop Around the Corner, The 
Mahabharata and It Could Happen to You. A big, ebullient movie, 
Slumdog bubbles up out of the brutal slums of Mumbai where orphaned 
brothers Jamal (Ayush Mahesh Khedekar) and Salim (Azharuddin Mohammed 
Ismail) forge a lifelong bond as "the Two Musketeers" and soars to the 
national stage of the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire. 

Motherless street urchin Latika (Rubiana Ali) becomes the third 
Musketeer when big-hearted Jamal, who always gives his best, offers 
her shelter from the rain, against the stern rebuke of Salim, who 
always keeps the best for himself. Literally scooped out a trash heap 
by the Fagin-like Maman (Ankur Vikal), the trio at first think they 
have found sanctuary with a kind-hearted benefactor but it quickly 
becomes apparent that their savior is a brutal exploiter of children. 
Salim helps Jamal and Latika escape but once again he saves the best 
for himself and Latika is recaptured. Jamal pines for Latika for the 
rest of the movie even as he and the ever resourceful Salim ride the 
rails and engage in all manner of petty larceny to survive. Jamal's 
life lessons, a marvelous tapestry shown in flashbacks, contribute to 
his unlikely run on Millionaire.

Director Danny Boyle (Trainspotting) does several remarkable things in 
Slumdog. He manages to convey the depth and breadth of India both 
socially and geographically, from crushing poverty to lavish wealth 
and from the trash heaps of Mumbai to the reflecting pools of the Taj 
Mahal. He artfully juxtaposes the ugliness of exploitation and 
corruption against the unrivaled beauty of love, faith and 
perseverance. He shows us an ancient India co-existing simultaneously 
with an Indian economy built on outsourced services such as those 
provided by the telephone call center where the adult Jamal(Dev Patel) 
toils as a chai-wallah, literally a boy who serves spiced tea.

In short, Slumdog Millionaire is an energetic homage to classic 
Twentieth Century filmmaking and a shining beacon pointing the way to 
how great movies can be in the new millennium.

~rave!






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds

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