Tuesday 5 January 2010

Exhibition and Exchange

Slumdog Millionaire
The film was released in January 2008. The producers lost their first distributer and so had to work extremely hard in order to get the film released. Fortunately Fox Searchlight took over the project and luckily, they released it in time for the "awards window" and eventually went on to win 8 Oscars. 

A Review of Slumdog Millionaire from Peal and Dean.com

More than 25 years after Gandhi swept all before it at the Academy Awards, another British film embedded in Indian culture is poised to conquer the world.

Scripted by Simon Beaufoy (The Full Monty), Slumdog Millionaire is an
utterly irresistible rites of passage drama that builds to an extraordinary emotional crescendo. Employing a simple flashback structure, Danny Boyle's modern day fairy-tale charts the inspiring journey of an orphan from the slums of Mumbai to the contestant's chair on his country's version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? The suspense within the television studio, where host Prem (Anil Kapoor) poses each multiple-choice question, is nothing compared to the tensions within Beaufoy's multi-layered screenplay. In the space of a single vignette, the film glides from sidesplitting comedy to gut-wrenching despair, with an honesty and subtlety that continually catches us off guard.

Indeed, there is as much darkness as light here, including scenes of torture, child abuse, exploitation and degradation that reflect the meagre lot of children born into a rat run of makeshift housing, detritus, dirty water and shattered dreams. You won't need to ask the rest of the audience or 'phone a friend: from the opening frame, it's clear that Boyle has hit the jackpot. Slumdog Millionaire may just be the best film you see all year. Eighteen-year-old Jamal Malik (Dev Patel) has been raised by older brother Salim (Madhur Mittal) since the boys lost their mother to the violence of a religious uprising.

Falling into the clutches of child slave traders and other nefarious types, the youngsters use guile to survive on the streets, encountering a pretty orphan girl called Latika (Freida Pinto) who will change their lives forever. As months and years pass, Salim becomes a lackey to a brutal gang lord who forcibly takes Latika as his wife, beating her when she dares to challenge him. Unable to rescue the woman he loves from her predicament, Jamal seizes the opportunity to appear on the famous television quiz show. Miraculously, the orphan knows the answer to each question and as he edges closer to the 20 million rupee final question, the young man stands on the precipice of a momentous leap of faith that could rescue Latika and finally drag him and Salim out of the gutter.


Set to the infectious rhythms of AR Rahman's evocative soundtrack, Slumdog Millionaire doesn't strike a single false note as it pieces together the chronologically fragmented narrative, drawing us into Jamal's heartbreaking story. Patel and the actors who play the hero's younger incarnations hold us spellbound, delivering natural performances that tug the heartstrings. The plot continually defies expectations, most obviously in the closing minutes when we're left weeping hot tears of unbridled joy, though not for a conventional happy ever after. You can't teach slumdogs new tricks.


Soundtrack

The main theme song is 'Jai Ho' by the popular Pussycat Dolls.

The fact that the film now had a popular female band supporting, meant that they helped to boost the box office and caused even more of a buzz for the new film. 


Box office
In the opening weekend alone it made nearly £2 million.
By the 5th April it had made its largest some overall of £30, 283, 374
Overall a great success for what started off as an art house film.




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