Category Archives: Dev Patel

Slumdog Millionaire-2008

Slumdog Millionaire-2008

Director Danny Boyle

Starring Dev Patel, Freida Pinto

Scott’s Review #786

Reviewed July 11, 2018

Grade: A-

Winner of the 2008 Best Picture Oscar (as well as seven other Academy Awards), Slumdog Millionaire (2008) arguably was the “feel good” film of the year.

While I am not sure if all of those awards are ultimately deserved, the film is nonetheless very good, offering a mixture of good culture, a young man overcoming enormous odds, and a love story.

Fans of the universal game show hit, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, will be pleased.

Young Dev Patel (critically acclaimed for 2016’s Lion) stars as a poor young Indian man, Jamal Malik. He is detained after being a contestant on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire after he comes one question away from winning a million dollars.

The producers go on a commercial break and Jamal is whisked away to custody as suspicions are aroused and the young man is accused of cheating. Since he is a “slumdog” and poorly educated, it is assumed there is no way possible he could know all the answers.

Jamal recounts, via flashbacks, through experience, how he came to know all of the correct answers.

Director, Danny Boyle does a fantastic job directing the film. Slumdog Millionaire is edited in a fast-paced fashion and the camera angles are quick and stylized, making for an excellent flow.

The soundtrack to the film is very effective and enhances the plot. For example, the music is extremely diverse and features genres such as traditional Indian classical music, European house music, and American-style hip hop.

This is an ingenious way for Boyle to incorporate multiple cultures and he, therefore, creates a rousing crowd-pleasing experience.

Another successful aspect of the film is its use of knowledge and intelligence to tell a story. As we experience Jamal’s difficult life beginning as a five-year-old orphan, the unlikely success story and his adventures on the streets are engulfed in both life lessons and education.

The audience is learning important details about the world while Jamal simultaneously is.

The romantic, love-story featured in Slumdog Millionaire is also a highlight and extremely well-crafted. Heartbreakingly, Jamal, his older brother Salim, and the lovely Latika (later played by the gorgeous Freida Pinto) are on the run when Latika vanishes.

Her disappearance and later reappearance are vital aspects to the heart of the film and Patel and Pinto make a handsome and highly likable couple. Their reconciliation is heartfelt and beautiful and gives the film a nice emotional investment.

The incorporation of a relevant and acclaimed game show into the story is wonderful, though hopefully as the years go by, the film does not suffer from a dated feel if and when Who Wants to Be a Millionaire is long forgotten, but alas this is a risk and only time will tell.

The glossy set and for American audiences, the Indian-style version of the game show is great fun as are the Indian locales, which visually dazzle.

A slight detraction of Slumdog Millionaire is the film is unquestionably uplifting and light feeling. Even though the characters face peril and dangerous experiences, the film just “feels” safe.

So much so that qualities such as slick and mainstream resound.

Don’t get me wrong, the film is genuine and has heart and soul, but just slightly too cheery. Of course, since the film is made well and the story and the acting great, this can easily be overlooked.

Slumdog Millionaire (2008) is a wonderful piece of work and is quite simply a film that lots of people will champion.  All of the elements are perfectly in place, which is a main selling point and a prime reason for the film’s many accolades.

The romance and adventure pieces are the best parts- with a quick flow and lots of fun, educational tools utilized.

The film is a nice pleasure to experience.

Oscar Nominations: 7 wins-Best Picture (won), Best Director-Danny Boyle (won), Best Adapted Screenplay (won), Best Original Score (won), Best Original Song-“Jai Ho”, “O Saya”, Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing (won), Best Cinematography (won), Best Film Editing (won)

Lion-2016

Lion-2016

Director Garth Davis

Starring Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman

Scott’s Review #521

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Reviewed November 19, 2016

Grade: A-

Lion (2016) is an enthralling, humanistic drama about family, lost loved ones, and the search to find them, as seen through the eyes of the same character as a child and an adult.

It features fantastic acting, specifically from stars Dev Patel (Slumdog Millionaire-2008) and Nicole Kidman, and also features lavish cinematography of the Indian and Australian countryside.

The film is based on a non-fiction book named “A Long Way Home.”

Introduced to a poor neighborhood in India in 1986, we meet five-year-old Saroo, a wide-eyed boy who idolizes his big brother. Their beautiful mother carries rocks for a living and relies on the boys to watch their younger sister.

The boys steal coal to help eliminate their mother’s hardships. Their father is absent.

Saroo accidentally gets on an empty train when he insists on accompanying his brother on a night job. He is transported thousands of miles away, losing his family in the process.

Twenty-five years later, and long since adopted by an Australian family, Saroo attempts to find his long-lost family using new technology- Google Earth.

In a lesser film, this subject matter might have been a sappy affair, predictable, and contrived.

But Lion soars with humanistic, emotional flair, and heartfelt, without any manipulations.

The first third of the film is focused on five-year-old Saroo. We witness his confusion, desperation, and scrapes with potential kidnappers, child molesters, and undesirables. We also see how resilient and intelligent he is, wisely outmaneuvering foes and savvy enough to avoid monstrous people.

As much as I enjoyed this film segment, it lasted slightly too long. I was ready to see Saroo as an adult and the encompassing problems to come, but this is a tiny gripe in an otherwise extraordinary film.

Lion takes off when Patel plays Saroo, who is now all grown up. Adopted by an Australian couple, John and Sue Brierley, he has lived a life of love, respect, and encouragement.

The Brierleys are a selfless couple who, in addition to Saroo, have adopted another Indian boy with deep emotional issues. This has caused hardship and problems in the household. Their reasoning for adopting is poignant; rather than bring their biological children into the world, why not save two children who need to be saved?

Patel and Kidman give emotional and raw performances. Patel is quite a find as he plays conflicted and haunted very well and is convincing in the lead role.

We witness his conflict as he struggles with not knowing what has become of his family in India, imagining their worry and the devastation of not knowing what has become of him. He also avoids telling Sue, his adoptive mother, who has her hands full with other emotional issues.

Kidman, who always delivers, is raw, emotional, and sympathetic.  As Sue struggles to be strong, her facial expressions are subtle and contained, yet dying inside with underlying pain is exceptionally relayed by Kidman in an award-worthy portrayal.

Director Garth Davis cleverly adds several scenes of Saroo longingly looking out into the ocean or simply gazing in the distance, imagining and self-reflective.

What makes these simple scenes great is through Saroo’s imagination, he imagines being with his birth mother; she is still young, and he is now an adult. Similarly, he imagines being with his brother; his brother is still ten, but Saroo is now an adult.

These are quiet, beautiful scenes that add layers to this film.

Lion (2016) is a wonderful experience in great storytelling, led by effective acting performances and a compelling screenplay that gives honesty in film-making to the true story that the film is based on.

The film is heartwarming and can be enjoyed by anyone.

Oscar Nominations: Best Picture, Best Supporting Actor-Dev Patel, Best Supporting Actress-Nicole Kidman, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Original Score, Best Cinematography