Oscar winner Slumdog Millionaire’s DVDs released in Mumbai
April 16th, 2009

Oscar
winning Best film Slumdog millionaire DVDs have been released in Mumbai
on wednesday.The release was much awaited by many fans to have the copy
of their much loved film.

During the release, Indian actor Anil
Kapoor was also present in the function along with Govind Nihalani who
is a producer and director himself.

The Slumdog Millionaire was
seen as a landmark for the music director A.R. Rahman winning him 2
awards one is for the best original score.

The film totally bagged 8 Oscar awards


http://www.thfire.com/2009/04/16/oscar-winner-slumdog-millionaires-dvds-released-in-mumbai/

 

Anil Kapoor launches Slumdog Millionaire's home video

Snaps : http://www.businessofcinema.com/slideshow.php?albumid=1358


Click next 'n view more Snaps.. :-)


-- 
regards.. 

Krish..
His Music ~ My Mother Tongue 





________________________________
From: Vithur <vith...@gmail.com>
To: arrahmanfans@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, 16 April, 2009 9:21:16 PM
Subject: [arr] Slumdog Millionaire (2-Disc)





Slumdog Millionaire (2-Disc) 
 
A teenager from the Mumbai slums (Patel) finds himself in the hot seat of a 
popular game show one question away from the top prize. But did he cheat or is 
he really that smart?  
There’s a reason critics and the general audience describe a movie like Slumdog 
Millionaire using words like “uplifting” and “dazzling” and “triumphant.” It’s 
not to get blurbed on the Blu-ray cover or to hop on the bandwagon. It’s 
because those are the words to describe a movie like this. 

It’s directed by Danny Boyle (with overlooked co-director Loveleen Tandan), the 
British filmmaker whose majority of films up to the point, including the gritty 
Trainspotting, zombie flick 28 Days Later, and the bungled sci-fi Sunshine, 
have been designed with a specific audience in mind. And now here is Slumdog 
Millionaire, partly in Hindi, shot entirely in India, yet entirely appealing to 
the masses. 

Written by Simon Beaufoy, based off Vikas Swarup’s 2005 novel, ‘Q&A,’ Slumdog 
is a Dickensian story about Jamal (Dev Patal, also Ayush Mahesh Khedekar as the 
young Jamal), a teenager from the Mumbai slums who becomes a contestant on an 
Indian version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. One question away from 20 
million rupees, the host (Anil Kapoor) and authorities grow curious. “Doctors, 
lawyers never get past 60 thousand rupees. What can a slumdog possibly know?” 

Did he cheat? Is he merely lucky? Or is he really a genius? 

As the movie progresses, it becomes less about the answer to those questions 
than about how he knows the Millionaire answers, but often wishes he doesn’t. 
As slums turn to skyscrapers, we watch as Jamal answers questions about Hindu 
god Rama, Samuel Colt, and a record-holding cricketer, all of which trigger 
violent and regrettable flashbacks from his past involving his mother, older 
brother Salim (Madhur Mittal, also Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail), who he pawned, 
begged, and thwarted greasy gangsters with in their younger years, and their 
third musketeer, Latika (Freida Pinto, also Rubina Ali), who Jamal falls in 
love with early on. 

This is a movie that relies on convenience and will be hard for some to swallow 
(“An American tourist just happens to give Jamal a hundred dollar bill, huh?? 
And he just happens to get that question ’bout Ben Franklin, huh??”), as will 
the self-congratulatory coda, a Bollywood-inspired dance sequence set to Best 
Original Song winner “Jai Ho.” 

But check it at the door, because Slumdog Millionaire is just as much fantasy 
as it is drama, action, crime, musical, and romance. It’s a beautiful blend of 
genres that, because of the part-gritty/ part-fantastical cinematography 
(Anthony Dod Mantle), faithful score (A.R. Rahman), primarily native cast, and 
passionate direction from Boyle and Tandan, is a success, and one of the most 
“uplifting,” “dazzling,” and “triumphant” movies in a very long time.  
Video: 2.35:1 Widescreen in 1080p High Definition with AVC codec. 

Audio: English/Hindi 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio. French 5.1 Dolby Digital. 
Subtitles in English, French, and Spanish. 

As Slumdog Millionaire was shot on various film stocks, the video transfer is 
hit-and-miss, with strong colors for a bulk of the film, but a good amount of 
grain showing in some of the flashbacks. 

The audio transfer is the real gem here, with the Oscar-winning A.R. Rahman 
score being put to good use during many scenes.  
Disc One: 

Commentary by Director Danny Boyle and Star Dev Patel: If you saw any of the 
awards season interviews with Boyle and Patel, it should be no surprise that 
the two have great chemistry. The two offer a fun and insightful track, noting 
production stories and having an overall comfortable time doing so. A must 
listen. 

Commentary by Producer Christian Colson and Writer Simon Beaufoy: This second 
track is weak compared to the first, but is still highly informative and worth 
hearing. 

Deleted Scenes (33:51): There are 12 here, including an extended chase 
sequence, Prem at the police station, an extra Millionaire question regarding 
the Taj Mahal, and Jamal confessing to Salim about his “destiny.” All of these 
scenes are great and add to the characters and depth of the story. Absolutely 
worth watching. 

Slumdog Dreams: Danny Boyle and the Making of Slumdog Millionaire (21:58): This 
two-part documentary features clips, behind-the-scenes footage, and interviews 
with Boyle, Patel, Beaufoy, and others. Topics include how the project came 
about, finding the perfect cast, shoot on location, and the different equipment 
used. Unfortunately, as was the case around awards season, co-director (India) 
Loveleen Tandan goes virtually unmentioned. 

Slumdog Cutdown (5:36) is a condensed version of the film set to “Jai Ho.” 

>From Script to Screen: The Toilet Scene (5:25) takes a look at the filming of 
>one of the funnier moments of the film. 

Manjha (41:03): This short black and white film from India is unimpressive 
overall, but should serve as great exposure for the director, Rahi Anil Barve. 

Also included is a Music Video, the Theatrical Trailer
(HD), and the European Theatrical Trailer. 

Disc Two: 

The sole feature here is the Digital Copy.  
If you're going to own 2008's Best Picture winner Slumdog Millionaire (and you 
should), Blu-ray is the way to go. With great transfers overall and a plethora 
of bonus features (controversially) missing from the DVD, this Blu-ray edition 
is a must for any collection. http://www.joblo. com/dvdclinic/ dvd_review. 
php?id=2391

-- 
regards,
Vithur




   


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