A teen from the ghettos of India finds himself at the center of a cheating scandal when he reaches new game-show heights in this lively and colorful drama from director Danny Boyle.The winner of the audience award at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival, director Danny Boyle’s latest offering combines his trademark frenetic style (see: Trainspotting) with a distinctly Hollywood-esque “little engine that could” type story, and the result is a colorful, enjoyable, occasionally harrowing and all-around entertaining drama with romantic undertones. Co-directed in India by Loveleen Tandon, and told largely in flashback via a police interrogation, the film follows Jamal Malik (Dev Patel), a contestant on India’s version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, who’s poised to win an unprecedented 20 million rupees when he’s suddenly suspected of cheating. The host of the program (Anil Kapoor) cannot believe that an uneducated former orphan-child of the slums could possibly know all the answers to the questions he’s being asked, so Jamal is hauled away to explain himself to a police inspector (the always wonderful Irfan Khan, most recently seen in The Namesake). As he sits, beaten and tortured by the authorities and maintaining his innocence, Jamal recounts – question by question – the specific life experiences that led to him knowing each answer. With rapid-fire editing, hand-held camerawork and plenty of weird camera angles (both of which combined led me to close my eyes from time to time because I was getting dizzy), and blessed with some gorgeous cinematography, the film takes us back through Jamal’s troubled childhood and young adulthood. As a young boy, he and older brother Salim get up to mischief, until a riot claims the life of their mother and the duo are left to fend for themselves on the streets. They meet a little girl named Latika, and the trio form a pint-sized “Three Musketeers,” looking out for one another despite the fact that fate and the world repeatedly separate them and reunite them through the years. But what radiates off the screen is Jamal’s love for Latika, a love that eventually lands him on Millionaire and on the road to financial freedom. While the film occasionally drags and could probably have been about 15 minutes shorter, and even though the question-by-question device starts off seeming like it might get very old very quickly, the underlying story is compelling and, more importantly, the performances of Slumdog’s young cast truly make the movie. Alongside Patel, who’s equal parts sad-puppy and super-smart success, there’s Madhr Mittal as the adult Salim and the stunning Frieda Pinto as the adult Latika, both of whom turn in some fine supporting work. Kapoor’s alternately smarmy and charming TV host is a delightful exercise in duality, and Khan’s initially skeptical and gradually engaged cop makes for a great audience for Jamal’s storytelling. It’s not easy to create a memorable character out of someone who’s basically sitting and listening to another character recount a story, but Khan makes it work. If the film’s advertising and early reviews are to be believed, Slumdog Millionaire is on a distinct Oscar track. Whether the decision-makers for that sort of thing think it’s that amazing a film remains to be seen, but it’s certainly a couple of hours at the cinema that audiences should find more than worthwhile. The DVD of Slumdog Millionaire includes two full commentary tracks, one by director Danny Boyle and actor Dev Patel, plus another commentary by producer Christian Colson and writer Simon Beaufoy. "Slumdog Cutdown" is a curious splicing together of scenes from the film (aka, the whole film in 5 minutes) to the tune of the Oscar-winning song "Jai Ho". I don't know, but I would have rather have seen the singer with a bunch of Bollywood dancers performing the song. Come on! There are also a dozen (!) deleted scenes, and a making-of documentary. Now we'll just have to wait for a less-rushed release of the film that will include mention of its big Oscar wins, including Best Picture. movie*pie Staff review
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