Slumdog Millionaire



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Imran Hasnee Security
Anil Kapoor Prem Kumar
Irfan Khan Police Inspector
Dev Patel Jamal Malik
Anand Tiwari Newscaster
Mia Drake Adele
Freida Pinto Latika
Shruti Seth Call Centre teacher

787 Comments »

    Pages: « 158153 152 151 150 149 [148] 147 146 145 144 1431 »

  • Over-Boyled

    The film captures the color and vibrancy of Mumbai, but the script is
    stupid, amateurish, contrived, melodramatic, and completely illogical.
    The preposterous notion that a game show contestant suspected of
    cheating would be tortured by the police is an insult to India. A
    competent director may have overcome the shortcomings of the script,
    but Boyle is obsessed with his distracting visual style (tilted camera,
    fast inter-cutting, excessive closeups) at the expense of story and
    character development and acting. His over-indulgent style is better
    suited to music videos. Also, as with his earlier "Trainspotting," this
    one features a revolting toilet scene. What's with that?

    kenjha - 3 May 2009
  • Kinda not a big deal

    This movie was all right, it wasn't bad but it also wasn't spectacular.
    I really think that the movie industry needed that one special film to
    push for awards season and Slumdog was a safe bet. The film wasn't
    nearly as gritty and dramatic as City of God (and I was told that it
    would be) and all in all, I expected a little bit more out of Danny
    Boyle (Trainspotting, 28 Days Later, Shallow Grave). There were more
    than a few plot holes that I guess every movie critic that saw the film
    decided to ignore (like how the heck does he actually get onto the
    show?). Also, Sri Lankan rapper M.I.A.'s music is terrible for the film
    and sounds kind of corny when played in context with some of the
    scenes. I mean, let's face it: "Paper Planes" was old the minute the
    first screening of the Pineapple Express trailer was finished; and
    Slumdog Millionaire plays this particular song like three different
    times in the film. Also, the dance sequence at the end of the film is
    just plain dumb (I'm guessing its paying tribute to Bollywood films or
    something); it really takes away from the dramatic punch and tone that
    the film had been trying to establish.

    johnhomicidal from United States - 30 April 2009
  • Typical Boy and Girl Can't Get Together Until the End of the Movie Movie

    I am not sure what all the hype is about this movie. It started out
    very slow and continued slow and did not become entertaining until
    halfway or more through the movie–worth seeing, but certainly nothing
    much above average. I suspect people liked it because it was not the
    typical Hollywood movie. I did not like the way it continued to
    flashback from the present to the past but I typically do not like
    movies that use this tactic excessively as this movie did. It was
    predictable in that the main character panned for a girl through the
    entire movie and circumstances always kept the two apart and only at
    the end of the movie did they finally get together. I thought it could
    have been edited better so that it did not drag so much in the first
    half of the movie. Certainly it is worth it to see if nothing more than
    it is very different than the typical Hollywood movie–no big name
    actors and while it is done in English, all of the actors are or appear
    to be native to India.

    ccmulder from United States - 30 April 2009
  • Street Smarts.

    A strange combination of "Rocky" and "City of God" which ends up being
    the most unexpected and amazing crowd-pleaser of recent memory. Young
    Dev Patel is being tortured by Mumbai police officers as it seems he
    has somehow cheated on India's version of "Who Wants to Be a
    Millionaire?". Immediately, the flashbacks begin and we see the
    character throughout his rough and turbulent life in the slums of one
    of the largest and most unforgiving cities in the world. Comedy,
    tragedy, crime, and intense drama blend together to prove Patel has the
    street smarts necessary to actually go the distance. Older brother
    Madhur Mittal, who has become a cutthroat thug, and one true love
    Freida Pinto (who just illuminates an already visually bright
    production), prove to be the most endearing people in Patel's life.
    Scene-stealer Anil Kapoor (as India's answer to Regis Philbin) nearly
    steals the production as the demented and acid-mouthed game show host
    who is tough to completely figure out. The movie also appropriately
    serves as a tribute to the former city of modern-day Bombay. Brilliant
    direction by Danny Boyle and an amazingly smart screenplay by Simon
    Beaufoy highlight a film which dominates in every major aspect of the
    cinema—from its mind-blowing editing to its revolutionary
    cinematography and finally to its addictive soundtrack and score. One
    of those films to embrace and experience again and again. A flat-out
    modern-day masterpiece which almost got a direct-to-video release (!?).
    5 stars out of 5.

    tfrizzell from United States - 29 April 2009
  • People are sheep..

    It's astonishing to see how ghastly efficient the propaganda machine of
    the movie business operates these days. I can't wait to read the first
    post doctorates on the study of how the whole world was manipulated
    into wholeheartedly believe that this atrociously saccharine Bollywood
    snoozer is worth even single nomination, aside from a couple of razzies
    that is.Watching this pathetic excuse for entertainment being drowned in
    acclaim, it made me wonder how all those professional movie critics
    somehow managed to forget the vast legacy of western cinema before they
    almost unanimously crawled up the arse of one D. Boyle and his snotty
    little film.You can almost forgive them, but then you realize that it's actually
    their job to tell you what I'm telling you now. The Academy Awards have
    turned into a Schmaltzolympics by favoring this sort of totally
    unimpressive and manipulative dross we all look down on the rest of the
    year. And people are sheep. But what else is new.Bah!

    (amalgam@live.nl) from Uncle Joe's basement - 29 April 2009

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