I try to hit the mantinee once a week. Here movies are $6 before noon Friday-Sunday, and thank god for it. This week's movie was so satisfying that I didn't feel the need for a double feature.
Slumdog Millionaire is based on a novel called 'Q and A' by Vikas Swarup. The screenplay was written by Simon Beafoy (The Full Monty, Ms. Pettigrew lives for a Day), Directed by Danny Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 days Later) and co-directed with Loveleen Tandan ( Art Direction for Deepa Mehta's film Earth, AD for Monsoon Wedding and Casting for Vanity Fair and Brick Lane).
It has been a long long time since I've seen a movie that combines the elements of so many genres without feeling like a casserole of mistake. Instead this took the talents from a wide range of talent fields and combined it to make it something amazing.
The story telling, the visuals, the use of language and music-- all of it came together to be one of the better movies I've seen in a long time. Dark, brutal, and yet somehow managed to maintain an optimism that didn't feel contrived, or inorganically attached after rounds of notes and a profoundly abused screenwriter.
( We're ignoring the last 1 minute of dialog here. Nobody's perfect.)
Dev Patel did an admirable job of playing Jamal. I was surprised to find out that he's only 18 years old. Not because he looked older, but because he was the kind of good that usually only comes after years of training. As Freida Pinto's first role, I think she played Latika as a smart survivor when it would have been very easy to play her as a flat 2 dimensional object.
So, you have a guy who directs horror movies, a screenwriter who's known for 'the little movie that could' scripts and an AD/Art director with a stunning visual sense usually reserved for art house films. It could have been a disaster of pretension and instead all those parts worked together amazingly well.
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