http://www.glamsham.com/movies/features/08/nov/01-slumdog-millionaire-an-indian-story-110806.asp

Which underdog doesn't want to become a millionaire? In British director
Danny Boyle's SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE, he is Jamal from the slums of Mumbai. The
film made a stunning impact at the recent Toronto Film Festival.

Living in a slum and earning of millions? Whom are you kidding? Well, if
it's a plucky kid like orphan Jamal who grows up in abject poverty in the
slums, but still makes million, you have to believe it. Because that's how
typical rags to riches stories are churned out by Bollywood with the
mandatory happy ending with the lady-love in tow.

But suppose this Bollywood story theme is adopted with a twist by a western
director like Danny Boyle, the well-known independent British filmmaker,
what do you get? A winner like SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE that wowed the audience
during its official launch at the recently concluded 33rd Toronto Film
Festival. So much so that it won the Cadillac People's Choice Award
indisputably.

Boyle turns a Mumbaikar's story aspiring to rise above the circumstances
into a funny, sardonic, tragi-comic narration moving at a break-neck speed
through the travails of Jamal. Boyle's earlier films like TRAINSPOTTING on a
group of heroin-addicted youths, 28 DAYS LATER, a sci-fi film, among others,
made him almost a cult figure. SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE adds another feather in
his cap.

For an Indian audience, the format of the film is instantly recognizable:
the extremely popular television game show sometime ago, Kaun Banega
Crorepati, the Indian version of UK's Who Wants to be a Millionaire. The
screenplay is loosely based on diplomat Vikas Swarup's debut novel Q & A. In
the book, Ram Mohammad Thomas,18, is arrested by the police on a complaint
by the producers of the game show. As they reason, how come a mere waiter
from the slums could answer all the questions correctly and hit the jackpot?
He must have had cheated. Swarup begins his book tellingly: 'I have been
arrested. For winning a quiz show. They came for me late last night, when
even the stray dogs had gone off to sleep…There was no hue and cry...Arrests
in Dharavi are as common as pickpockets on the local train.'

In the film, Jamal, the chai-walla, is the prototype of Ram Mohammad Thomas.
He and his brother Salim, get orphaned during the Bombay riots and become
street urchins- 'slumdogs'. His long journey to survive in the metropolis
and outside might seem unreal to an audience familiar with the Taj Mahal (it
features in the film too), Gateway of India or the glittering lifestyle of
the modern Indian city. But to us, it's not so strange. The world of slums
and poverty, the adulation for stars like the Big B in this scenario, the
desperation to survive against huge odds, in short, portraits of the
underbelly of 'shining' cities, is not too far from our consciousness.

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The characters inhabiting this world are familiar too - the so-called
do-gooders on the prowl looking for displaced kids and in the name of giving
food and shelter, disfiguring them to turn into street-side beggars, little
girls plucked to convert them into nautch girls, Mafia dons exploiting poor
boys to groom them for the henchman's job, as Salim becomes in the
unforgiving world.

But Jamal does not give in so easily. So he slogs. The soft corner for
little Latika, an orphan like him, and taken away by the evil
'charity-giving' gang also remains though he has lost touch with her.

But the film's strength is in looking at life with a lot of humour, and
saluting the resilience of the human spirit. The same resilience that makes
Jamal shun the kind of violent lifestyle Salim chooses, the same
steadfastness that makes him hope to meet Latika one day because he realizes
he loves her, and a doggedness that makes him enter the KBC show on a fluke.


Understandably, anyone would wonder how could a tea-vendor without a formal
education stand up to the scrutiny of the sophisticated show's host. Well,
for most Indians who believe in bhagya- fate, it can happen. After all,
every question asked in the show happens to have a relevance to Jamal's
conflicting past- the make of a gun, the pictures on a dollar bill (he and
his gang conned American tourists at the Taj Mahal blithely), and so on. And
so he wins.

The brilliant touch is in the Q & A sessions when the viewers in every other
Indian household wait breathlessly for the answer to come along. And when
it's correct, they jump with joy. For isn't it a dream of every man on the
street to win that pot of gold at the end of the rainbow? Jamal reflects
their aspirations. He keeps their hope afloat.

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Jamal also manages to find Latika in a don's den and Salim, a changed man,
helps to set her free. At the end of the show Jamal and Latika are united
again through the ubiquitous cell-phone (KBC's helpline?). As the curtain
came down with Jamal and Latika doing the happy-ending Bollywood film scene
dancing exuberantly complete with extras, on a Mumbai railway station
platform, the audience in many screenings in Toronto stood up applauding,
and honestly a few even did a jig keeping with the tune. The energy of the
story is unmistakable.

SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE is shot in real locale- India, uses local colour, has an
all Indian cast, and displays an understanding of local nuances. And it
works. Youngsters like Dev Patel, Madhuri Mittal, Freida Pinto stand their
ground with veterans like Irrfan Khan and Anil Kapoor (the host of the
show). Above all, it is a look at life in the multi-hued country without
being judgmental, as happens sometimes with filmmakers from the West.


-- 
regards,
Vithur

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