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The Artist

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Home Reviews 2008 LFF: Slumdog Millionaire
LFF: Slumdog Millionaire Print E-mail
Written by Ivan Radford   
Thursday, 30 October 2008 13:50
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After two weeks of red carpets, films and galas galore, the 52nd London Film Festival draws to a close tonight with the final premiere of Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire.

Who wants to be a millionaire? Pretty much everyone in the slums of Mumbai. Everyone, that is, except for Jamal (Dev Patel). But it's this impoverished Indian answering the infamous fifteen questions. One away from the jackpot, he is arrested for fraud and savagely interrogated. How does someone like him know the answers?

Danny Boyle tells us, rewinding from the recorded show back to Jamal’s childhood and hitting the play button hard. When they are just boys, Jamal and his older brother, Salim (Madhur Mittal), are orphaned when their mother is killed in a horrific riot. They become street kids, slum dogs, pulling any stunt to grab a fistful of Rupees. Drums pounding in our ears, the brothers run away from gangsters and the police, entangled in the child-exploiting underworld of India – this is the stuff that isn’t in the guide book.

Intercut with his on-screen Q and A, Jamal’s life story unfolds energetically, from his chai-running day job to his brother’s wayward fortune. Through it all, he steadfastly loves fellow slum-girl Lakita (Freida Pinto). His devotion an ever fixed mark, which looks on hard times and is never shaken, she’s the reason he goes on Millionaire in the first place. Will she be watching when he gets to the final test of his knowledge? Portrayed by various young actors, the three musketeers age convincingly, their friendship thrown about by the buffeting of poverty; authenticity is the aim and with a talented cast, Boyle’s co-director Loveleen Tanda ensures it’s always achieved.

Channeling City of God and Tsotsi, the production is full of dirt-covered streets and on-foot chases. Ramping up the style (dutch tilts ahoy), Danny repeatedly foregrounds the backdrop, placing the action firmly beside its location. Coupled with the beat of the score, style saturates every second of screen time – we’re a long way from Edinburgh, but Danny has never been more at home. At its heart a love story, Slumdog Millionaire is an eye-opening rush of raw cinematic verve. It’s time to stop spotting trains, and start spotting awards.
 

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