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    Categories: Opinion

Film Review: Slumdog Millionaire

There’s a certain je ne sais quoi I find myself noticing every time I watch a new Danny Boyle-directed film. Many directors have trademark qualities that even a novice film geek could pick up on, from Quentin Tarantino’s rapid-fire pop culture-inflected dialogue to Martin Scorcese’s Rolling Stones’-tinged gangster flicks, but Boyle has never seemed to have a weakness for any particular style or trademark. Perhaps they’ve always been there and it’s just taken me seven films to notice, but there are definitely some shared traits – among them the use of uptempo electronica, messages of hope and the featuring of a charismatic male lead. Taken on their own, they are vague, indistinguishable traits – after all, lots of films might have those things in common. But after Trainspotting, A Life Less Ordinary, The Beach, 28 Days Later…, and now with Slumdog Millionaire, it’s clear that the Boyle Brand has been established.

The design of the poster and the second half of the title should make it spoiler-free to mention that the game show Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? plays a large part in the film’s plot. What’s not so obvious, though, is just how simple, yet brilliant, its involvement is. We’re given the life story of Jamal Malik – the titular slumdog (think dirt poor folk) – in flashback fashion, but unlike your typical “start in the present and just jump back to the past and stay there” style, a curveball is thrown. We know from the start that Jamal is featured on the game show; what we get is his life as told by the reasons why he knows the answers that he does.

It doesn’t even matter that his story – past or present – isn’t wildly original or that the characters are stock (think Blood Diamond + Moulin Rouge minus the singing, with a dash of The Usual Suspects thrown in for good measure). The acting by the almost-entirely Indian born cast (star Dev Patel is U.K.-born) is fantastic, particularly by the two sets of children that play Jamal and his older brother Salim at various ages, and Boyle tells the story with such verve that you won’t care if you know where the tale is headed. As a bonus, we get a terrific M.I.A.-heavy soundtrack by A.R. Rahman and an appearance by my favorite Indian-born actor (and potential FF-UN), Irfan Khan.

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