Slumdog Millionaire (tbc)
Director
Danny Boyle
Starring
Dev Patel, Anil Kapoor, Irrfan Khan, Madhur Mittal, Freida Pinto
The ViewLondon Review
Review byMatthew Turner31/10/2008
Opens Friday 23 January 2009

Five out of Five stars
Running time: 120 mins

Hugely
enjoyable and bursting with energy, this is a superbly directed,
brilliantly written and beautifully acted drama that packs a powerful
emotional punch.

What's it all about?
Directed by
Danny Boyle, Slumdog Millionaire opens with 18-year-old slum kid Jamal
Malik (Dev Patel, from Skins) being arrested on suspicion of cheating
after being one question away from winning 20 million rupees on India's
Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? After enduring some rather nasty torture
(one rather hopes ITV don't have a similar policy), he tells the police
officer (Irrfan Khan) the story of his life, where incredibly, each
episode holds the key to one of the questions he's answered.

Jamal's
story begins in the Mumbai slums, where he was orphaned, along with his
brother Salim (Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail), when their mother was
killed in a religious uprising. Later, Jamal and Salim survive by
living by their wits on the streets, until Jamal falls in love with
Latika (Rubina Ali), a young orphan girl who is destined to come
between them.

The Good
Boyle gets terrific
performances from his young cast: three actors play each of the lead
roles (Jamal, Salim and Latika) and they're all astonishing,
particularly Ayush Mahesh Khedekar, who's genuinely heartbreaking as
the youngest Jamal. There's also strong support from Irrfan Khan and
Anil Kapoor, who's brilliantly slimy as India's version of Chris
Tarrant.

Simon Beaufoy's script (adapted from a best-selling
novel by Vikas Swarup) cleverly weaves together several different
timelines and the finale brilliantly incorporates all the tension
already inherent in the Millionaire set-up.

The Great
Boyle's
direction is genuinely impressive; every scene crackles with energy and
he really captures the vibrant atmosphere of the various Indian cities.
He also orchestrates some truly astonishing sequences, from a thrilling
chase through the slums to a nail-bitingly tense sequence with some
Fagin-like gangsters and the gross-out humour of young Jamal braving a
cesspit in order to get an autograph from a Bollywood star.

Worth seeing?
Quite
simply, Slumdog Millionaire is unmissable entertainment and a strong
contender for a Best Picture nomination come Oscar time. Highly
recommended.

http://www.viewlondon.co.uk/films/slumdog-millionaire-film-review-26087.html

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