Just been to the cinema to see this and I have to say that I think it's bloody excellent. The posters tout it as a feel good flick with a bright, happy, shiny, smiley poster but it's a bit of a lie. Although the overall film is shot through with optimism there's a very harsh truth at work throughout it. If you don't know the premise, a young lad from the slums of Mumbai has found himself on the show Who Wants to be A Millionaire, genially taunted by his mildly terrifying host for being practically of the untouchable caste. He's doing well. Too well for some suspicious and jealous minds.
The young man in question is called Jamal and his life is retold in the setting of a sometimes brutal police interrorgation, the interrogators demanding a confession from him that he cheated to get as far as he did in the gameshow. Because he's just a kid from the slums right? How the hell did he know the answers to such obscure, learned questions? And so Jamal tells them how he came to know...
The film is alive with colour and light and movement; ever optimistic life inhabiting a blighted landscape of shacks and refuse and poverty. Jamal and his brother suffer horrible loss, great danger and poverty - but also by the light of their quick wits and nimble frames astonishing coups of trainers, food, money and crash space. As both their journeys take them in different directions, so the events in their lives and the decisions they make play to Jamal's Muslim belief - "It is written." And yet Jamal's calm-eyed acceptance of what fate deals him does not make him a victim, he accepts what is done, and keeps punching and kicking and scheming his way to his goal anyway. And whichever way things work out in the end, well, "So it is written."
The acting is universally good to great. Characters have that see-saw of being amusing one moment and terrifying the next. There's some stand out villains who I don't want to reveal, but one is mesmerisingly creepy in a cold, smiling way. The child actors are faultless too, you completely forget they're actors working a script. It's a film that rips along too, barely pausing to catch breath. It's not concerned with character motivation or delving into emotion - it's more a tale racing to capture the bloody-minded struggle for survival, hope and the pursuit of dreams.
Featuring violence, humour, beauty and at times an unflinching ugliness that is hard to watch, Slumdog Millionaire might just be the film of the year. True, there are flaws. The ending is somewhat Dickensian in coincidences, the entire story has something of an urban fairytale to it... but so what? It feels true and vital, and that makes a fucking good film in my book.
A must see. Best Boyle film since Trainspotting? Yup. Better than Trainspotting...? I'll have to check and watch them both again...
Five stars.