[arr] IndieWire reviews SdM

2008-11-13 Thread Gopal Srinivasan
REVIEW | Trivial Pursuit: Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire

by Eric Hynes (November 11, 2008)
[An indieWIRE review from Reverse Shot.]
A noisy, sub-Dickens update on the romantic tramp's tale, Slumdog Millionaire
zips around a boy's hard-luck life with a strange verve. Ragtag
children run through a labyrinthine Indian shantytown with a police
officer in hot pursuit. Two boys ride atop a moving train, hanging
upside down over the side to steal food from a wealthy family. The same
boys arrive at the Taj Mahal and give bogus tours to German tourists.
Later they guide an American couple around a scenic village by foot
while locals strip their fancy car for parts. The kids are cute, shots
are stylishly skewed, cuts are whip-quick, and rousing remixes of M.I.A.'s 
ubiquitous Paper Planes pop-pop and ching-ching throughout. Poverty can be so 
much fun.

The over-reliance on M.I.A. nods to where Slumdog Millionaire is coming from. 
British director Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 Days Later) and British 
screenwriter Simon Beaufoy (The Full Monty)
approach their indigenous Indian locales and characters as though
components of some pop diaspora, equating wild flower with root. Boyle
careens through the hustle and bustle, employing tired visceral
techniques -- jumpy handheld, tilted frames, extreme close-ups -- and a
LOUD-quiet-LOUD soundscape. But there's a drive to the filmmaking, a
harping insistence that something fresh is happening here (or over
there) despite the musty narrative. There are surface seductions, such
as an emergent cityscape reflected by the tinted shells of designer
sunglasses, or a sly, pulse-pounding sequence improbably motivated by
the banal mechanics of telemarketing, but the film stalls on style.
Like a deep-pocketed club owner or talent manager, Boyle sells Mumbai
-- or the hip Anglo vision of it -- as the new hotness. And pace the
title, he's slumming his way to millions.
Structured, in all seriousness, around questions posed on the Indian
version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? the film thwacks to life
when police interrogators rough up eighteen-year-old Jamal (Dev Patel)
for allegedly cheating his way to millions on the popular game show.
What the hell can a slumdog possibly know? they ask rhetorically,
alluding to Jamal's orphaned, uneducated past. Jamal wakes from a
battered slumber to rejoinder: The answers. I knew the answers. Roll
opening credits as Boyle flashbacks to Jamal and other dirty-soled boys
sifting through trash. How DID Jamal know the answers? Not through
study, or curiosity or innate brilliance. Our universal hero learned
the harder way -- from the school of hard knocks, natch.
With the interrogators prodding him to prove his honesty, he
flashbacks to colorful and tragic episodes of his life, each birthing a
nugget of unconscious trivial knowledge. He knows about guns because
he's had them pointed at him; he knows about a Bollywood star because
his brother traded away his prized autographed picture; he knows about
cricket because -- bear with me here -- when he finally rediscovered
the love of his life in a gangster's lair, that's what said gangster
was watching on his flat-screen TV. Another question provokes a
flashback to his mom's murder by marauding Hindus (religious and racial
conflict is borrowed for plot but never explored), prompting him to
tell the police inquisitors, I wish I didn't know that answer. Oh,
for a spotless mind.
A goofy picaresque to rival Forrest Gump, Slumdog
Millionaire has a similar power to please, shell-gaming the audience
into emotionally investing in and celebrating its protagonist's dumb
romanticism. Forrest's behavior was an expression of low IQ, but
Jamal's stolen childhood doesn't really explain his simplicity -- it's
just the only facet he's given. Both Forrest and Jamal pine for the
model-pretty playmates of their youths, their first love strong enough
to sustain them through life's indignities. Boyle condescends to
inserting a shot of Latika (Freida Pinto) whenever Jamal is at
his lowest, a guiding light for us all to follow. Also orphaned as a
young girl, Latika gets captured by a seemingly beneficent
child-slave-herder, pimped out as a virginal belly-dancer, raped by
Jamal's teenaged brother Salim (Madhur Mittal), and possessed by
the gangster, but Jamal keeps aspiring to save her, undaunted by the
plot's tedious insistence on keeping her literally captive. He wants
nothing else; he's got nothing else. Knowing that she watches Who
Wants to Be a Millionaire as an escape from her hellish life, he goes
on the show to communicate with her. Yes, he phones a friend.
In championing Forrest Gump's purity, Robert Zemeckis's film
mocked both U.S. history and the complexities of adulthood, helping to
fan the flames of American anti-intellectualism to a towering
mid-Nineties blaze. Boyle's ode to dumb love and circumstance hasn't
the same deliberation, but Slumdog Millionaire does manage to make
bombastic offense. Jamal's success on the 

[arr] IndieWire reviews SdM

2008-11-11 Thread Gopal Srinivasan
Trivial Pursuit: Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire

by Eric Hynes (November 11, 2008)
[An indieWIRE review from Reverse Shot.]
A noisy, sub-Dickens update on the romantic tramp's tale, Slumdog Millionaire
zips around a boy's hard-luck life with a strange verve. Ragtag
children run through a labyrinthine Indian shantytown with a police
officer in hot pursuit. Two boys ride atop a moving train, hanging
upside down over the side to steal food from a wealthy family. The same
boys arrive at the Taj Mahal and give bogus tours to German tourists.
Later they guide an American couple around a scenic village by foot
while locals strip their fancy car for parts. The kids are cute, shots
are stylishly skewed, cuts are whip-quick, and rousing remixes of M.I.A.'s 
ubiquitous Paper Planes pop-pop and ching-ching throughout. Poverty can be so 
much fun.

The over-reliance on M.I.A. nods to where Slumdog Millionaire is coming from. 
British director Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 Days Later) and British 
screenwriter Simon Beaufoy (The Full Monty)
approach their indigenous Indian locales and characters as though
components of some pop diaspora, equating wild flower with root. Boyle
careens through the hustle and bustle, employing tired visceral
techniques -- jumpy handheld, tilted frames, extreme close-ups -- and a
LOUD-quiet-LOUD soundscape. But there's a drive to the filmmaking, a
harping insistence that something fresh is happening here (or over
there) despite the musty narrative. There are surface seductions, such
as an emergent cityscape reflected by the tinted shells of designer
sunglasses, or a sly, pulse-pounding sequence improbably motivated by
the banal mechanics of telemarketing, but the film stalls on style.
Like a deep-pocketed club owner or talent manager, Boyle sells Mumbai
-- or the hip Anglo vision of it -- as the new hotness. And pace the
title, he's slumming his way to millions.
Structured, in all seriousness, around questions posed on the Indian
version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? the film thwacks to life
when police interrogators rough up eighteen-year-old Jamal (Dev Patel)
for allegedly cheating his way to millions on the popular game show.
What the hell can a slumdog possibly know? they ask rhetorically,
alluding to Jamal's orphaned, uneducated past. Jamal wakes from a
battered slumber to rejoinder: The answers. I knew the answers. Roll
opening credits as Boyle flashbacks to Jamal and other dirty-soled boys
sifting through trash. How DID Jamal know the answers? Not through
study, or curiosity or innate brilliance. Our universal hero learned
the harder way -- from the school of hard knocks, natch.
With the interrogators prodding him to prove his honesty, he
flashbacks to colorful and tragic episodes of his life, each birthing a
nugget of unconscious trivial knowledge. He knows about guns because
he's had them pointed at him; he knows about a Bollywood star because
his brother traded away his prized autographed picture; he knows about
cricket because -- bear with me here -- when he finally rediscovered
the love of his life in a gangster's lair, that's what said gangster
was watching on his flat-screen TV. Another question provokes a
flashback to his mom's murder by marauding Hindus (religious and racial
conflict is borrowed for plot but never explored), prompting him to
tell the police inquisitors, I wish I didn't know that answer. Oh,
for a spotless mind.
A goofy picaresque to rival Forrest Gump, Slumdog
Millionaire has a similar power to please, shell-gaming the audience
into emotionally investing in and celebrating its protagonist's dumb
romanticism. Forrest's behavior was an expression of low IQ, but
Jamal's stolen childhood doesn't really explain his simplicity -- it's
just the only facet he's given. Both Forrest and Jamal pine for the
model-pretty playmates of their youths, their first love strong enough
to sustain them through life's indignities. Boyle condescends to
inserting a shot of Latika (Freida Pinto) whenever Jamal is at
his lowest, a guiding light for us all to follow. Also orphaned as a
young girl, Latika gets captured by a seemingly beneficent
child-slave-herder, pimped out as a virginal belly-dancer, raped by
Jamal's teenaged brother Salim (Madhur Mittal), and possessed by
the gangster, but Jamal keeps aspiring to save her, undaunted by the
plot's tedious insistence on keeping her literally captive. He wants
nothing else; he's got nothing else. Knowing that she watches Who
Wants to Be a Millionaire as an escape from her hellish life, he goes
on the show to communicate with her. Yes, he phones a friend.
In championing Forrest Gump's purity, Robert Zemeckis's film
mocked both U.S. history and the complexities of adulthood, helping to
fan the flames of American anti-intellectualism to a towering
mid-Nineties blaze. Boyle's ode to dumb love and circumstance hasn't
the same deliberation, but Slumdog Millionaire does manage to make
bombastic offense. Jamal's success on the TV show