One Of The Best Films Of The Year, "Slumdog Millionaire" Is Still Difficult To Watch!
Written: Dec 03 '08 (Updated Mar 27 '09)
Product Rating:
Pros: Great direction, Interesting characters, Great acting, Much of the plot, Use of soundtrack
Cons: Plot predictability
The Bottom Line: So close to perfect, I bumped it up, "Slumdog Millionaire" has moments of predictability, which do not rob the film of its (terrifying) enjoyability. Thoroughly engaging.
A few days ago, I posted a listing of the worst films of 2008 (at: http://www.epinions.com/content_5258715268 ) and since then I have had numerous messages and e-mails from people asking me when I am going to get around to my "Best Of 2008" list. The truth is, I've been putting it off because after all of the movies I have spent the year watching, I cannot come up with ten films from this year that are truly worth seeing to the point that I would eagerly recommend them. Before going out for the night, I think I had six or seven that I felt comfortable making a "Best Of" list with. This has not been a great year for movies. But the list got another spot filled - and a high one at that - with "Slumdog Millionaire." Yes, it's that good.
"Slumdog Millionaire" is - to date - one of the top three films of the year, qualitatively. It is well-directed and disturbing and brutal in its reality (for the most part). It is mostly clever and it is an easy nine out of ten in my ten point pantheon. It is one of those films that is so good at what it does I had to take a moment before being able to stand after the movie was done. Far from being a family, feel-good movie, "Slumdog Millionaire" is a harsh, often brutal and realistic look at India and the fates of three people as they are woven over two decades.
Jamal Malik is in an Indian prison where he is being tortured by a detective and his muscle. The charge is simple enough; Jamal is accused of cheating on the Hindi version of "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire." So, interrogated, Jamal begins to tell the story of how he came up with each of the correct answers that have put him a single answer away from the top prize in the game's history. Jamal weaves a story that begins with chasing after a celebrity's autograph after literally getting covered in dung.
From there, Jamal's life becomes intertwined with his brother Salim and a girl they rescue from certain death, Latika. After witnessing the brutal religiously-motivated slaying of their mother, Salim and Jamal flee with Latika. They are taken in by a gangster who uses orphans to beg on the streets and Jamal makes choices that put him and Salim on the run. As the boys grow up and scam their way across India, Jamal longs for Latika and works to find her in one of the most populous nations on the planet. Salim, for his part, embraces the dark side and becomes the gangster that Jamal spends his life running from. And in the run, are the answers to the questions on "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire!"
The low point of "Slumdog Millionaire" has to be the plot. It works, for the most part, but it is predictable enough that in the first half of the movie, I turned to the person I was seeing it with and told her exactly what the final question in the game would be. And I was right. This is - at times - shocking for the horror and brutal reality of the situations, but in the end, it is very predictable for certain key elements.
Notable among those elements is the narrative technique. "Slumdog Millionaire" has moments where it is problematic in that the narrator could not possibly have heard things that appear on screen. The film is told in much the same way as the masterful "The Usual Suspects" (reviewed at: http://www.epinions.com/content_341069172356 ) and in this case, there are moments of embellishment that those attentive to the fact that the story is being told from Jamal's point of view, there are things he could not have seen or heard. So, for example, when he and Salim run away at one point, there is a person who says something on screen long after they would have been out of earshot.
That said, "Slumdog Millionaire" is otherwise flawless. The plot is paced in a way that is engaging. The viewer becomes caught up in the furor of Jamal's success on "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" and we find ourselves rooting along with the viewers of the show, even though we know he has some success on the gameshow. Similarly, viewers become engaged in the execution of the plot such that we take an active role in looking for the answers. That type of energy is a rare thing in a movie; to be so engaging that the viewer is essentially proactively watching the film. It has been a long time since I watched something with such a sense of anticipation for what was coming next.
That is largely because of the characters. The characters in "Slumdog Millionaire" are thoroughly engaging. Jamal is a hapless hero and it is easy to root for him. He has been abused, underestimated and ridiculed to such an extent that the viewer wants him to triumph. As well, he is one of the few innately good characters in film that actually works. Jamal steels to stay alive, but he has a moral code. He becomes upset when his brother steals his autograph and sells it; he refuses to resort to the way of the gun and, in the end, he is motivated almost exclusively by blind love. Jamal is the archetypal hero in a lot of ways, and his rags to the chance of riches story is compelling.
Of course, Jamal's story is woven beautifully into Salim's tale. As Jamal ascends through hard (if illegal) work, Salim descends into vice through a frustration with the way things are. He discards his moral code and attempts to exert power over Jamal and Latika. He takes for sport and when he comes into possession of a gun, he sets down a road that separates him forever from Jamal. In fact, perhaps the greatest horror of the film is the moment Salim gets what Jamal has longed for all his life: Latika.
Latika initially seems simply like the object of affection for Jamal and the barter chip Salim uses to buy power, respect and status within the den of thieves he drags her into. But instead, Latika is a tragic heroine. She sacrifices much to allow Jamal his freedom and the chance to preserve his innocence and that takes a strength that is not seen in her until late in the movie.
Universally well-acted, "Slumdog Millionaire" is a tour de force on the acting front from a slew of actors few (Americans, at least) have ever heard of. Child actors Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail, Ayush Mahesh Khedekar, Tanay Chheda, and Ashutosh Lobo Gajiwala play the younger Salim and Jamals in such a way that provides a strong, continuous performance through the characters' different ages. In fact, the performances go well beyond simply casting children who look vaguely alike; the mannerisms are picked up flawlessly by each incarnation of the children.
But it is Madhur Mittal, Freida Pinto and Dev Patel who rule "Slumdog Millionaire." Mittal is brilliant as the oldest Salim, playing him with a stone-faced ruthlessness that is downright scary and utterly believable. Mittal has a way of fixing his eyes in what one assumes is the most convincing portrayal of murderous intensity just shy of actually being a trained killer. His performance kept my stomach in knots for an hour after I finished watching this film!
Freida Pinto is similarly believable as Latika. Pinto is beautiful in a very classical sense and her performance oscillates impressively between incredible strength and troubling despondency. She plays a handshy woman incredibly well near the end of the film and her role is almost as unsettling as Mittal's.
But it is Dev Patel who carries "Slumdog Millionaire." Patel needs to engage the viewer right away and he does with a casual body language that screams of a life of movement, starvation and exhaustion. Patel carries himself with an ease and seriousness that is simultaneous and he manages to strike the perfect balance to make the viewer believe in Jamal, the struggles and history of the character.
"Slumdog Millionaire" is directed by Danny Boyle, whose only other work I have seen is "28 Days Later" (reviewed at: http://www.epinions.com/content_106541846148 ). He uses many of the same conceits; frenetic camera movements, momentarily overbearing soundtrack and wide shots of cities that incredibly transport the viewer to a very specific time and place. And just like "28 Days Later," there is a psychological horror aspect to "Slumdog Millionaire" that makes the movie very difficult to watch. Jamal begins the movie being brutalized and his life goes from one form of abuse to another, with twists and turns that are agonizing to watch.
On DVD, "Slumdog Millionaire" is packed with worthwhile deleted scenes that flesh out further the story of the main movie. As well, there is a featurette wherein Danny Boyle discusses the film and two engaging commentary tracks! This is a Best Picture DVD that might fit on one disc, but the bonuses reward those who buy it!
Ultimately, the film triumphs because we get a catharsis that (mostly) works and justifies the terror we have to go through to get there.
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