Jamal Malik, an 18 year-old orphan from the slums of Mumbai, is about to experience the biggest day of his life. With the whole nation watching, he is just one question away from winning a staggering 20-million rupees on India's "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?" But when the show breaks for the night, police arrest him on .. Read more
| Starring | Dev Patel, Madhur Mittal, Freida Pinto, Anil Kapoor |
|---|---|
| Director | Danny Boyle |
| Genres | Audio Descriptive, Drama, Romance |
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Oscar winning drama, about an 18 year-old orphan from the slums of Mumbai, who is just one question away from winning the jack-pot on India's "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? He is arrested on suspicion of cheating and tells the story of his life to prove his innocence. read more »
Danny Boyles Slumdog Millionaire is a film so upbeat and colourful that, by the time youre relaying its... read more on Time Out
This film was NOT what I expected at all when I took my Nephew to see it at the cinema. I had no idea what it was about so wasn't sure what to expect.... but it wasn't what I got!
Not sure if its worth a watch, I think maybe it is purely because it is like no other film I have seen so far. It does have a good story line which keeps you gripped & wondering what is going to happen, but at the same time its slightly dull and you kind of want to speed it up after the first hour or so and I just got bored.
I had never heard of this movie, so when my friend suggested we see it on my recent visit to San Francisco, I thought 'Hey, why not?' I was completely overwhelmed.
I don't know if it was because I knew nothing about it which made it so much more enjoyable or what, but this is a real gem and it made me laugh out loud, smile loads and I even got a tiny bit emotional when it finished.... (Please note I was also suffering from a cold at the time of watching this movie so the streaming eyes and runny nose were in no way related...)
I love what Danny Boyle has done with the Bollywood genre.
I recommend that you see this movie as soon as it's out in the UK!
Whilst I think that Danny Boyle is a great film maker, I don't like all his films. I admire his bravery in tackling different subject matter for his films. However, for every Trainspotting, 28 days later, and (yes I really like) Sunshine, we get A Life Less Ordinary, The Beach, and Millions. Each of the latter three films may be better than others in its chosen category, but they don't grab me like his others. Slumdog Millionaire makes me feel the same. It's not bad, but it's not great (let alone worthy of 8 Oscars). I suppose the subject matter is very 'worthy', and so makes it prime oscar fodder. I can't help think that the directors style got in the way of the story itself. It just didn't work for me as a complete package. A more 'Kitchen Sink' approach (rather than hyper reality) would have worked better for me anyway. I draw parallels with 'City Of God'. which is a great film. I think this film should have been either more visceral (as per Danny's 'Better' films), or used a director better suited to the romantic subject matter. I would have preferred either a more brutal insite into the plight of the kids, or a lighter touch based around the love story arc. In a way the film doesn't do itself justice as either an exposition, or as a love story.
Great director, just wrong for this film.
Also, the geeky kid could never pull such a top looking bird:-)!
Nice, but utimatly forgetable.
This is definately not an easy film to watch. No punches are pulled on the poverty, the crime and the discrimination against those at the bottom of the pile. Having said that, this is a film with a tale to tell and it does it very well indeed. Everytime you think the story line is taking a dip, it surprises you with a new vista, a new twist and a new take on an old line. This turned out to be one of the best acted and beliveable films I have seen for a long time. As I walked out of the cinema I was not at all sure, but a week later I was recalling morals and good tales from it; a sure sign that it had a lot to offer.
Be warned, the colour, vibrancy and texture of this film is hotter than any curry you have had and as a result will blow your mind.
This film was NOT what I expected at all when I took my Nephew to see it at the cinema. I had no idea what it was about so wasn't sure what to expect.... but it wasn't what I got!
Not sure if its worth a watch, I think maybe it is purely because it is like no other film I have seen so far. It does have a good story line which keeps you gripped & wondering what is going to happen, but at the same time its slightly dull and you kind of want to speed it up after the first hour or so and I just got bored.
I had never heard of this movie, so when my friend suggested we see it on my recent visit to San Francisco, I thought 'Hey, why not?' I was completely overwhelmed.
I don't know if it was because I knew nothing about it which made it so much more enjoyable or what, but this is a real gem and it made me laugh out loud, smile loads and I even got a tiny bit emotional when it finished.... (Please note I was also suffering from a cold at the time of watching this movie so the streaming eyes and runny nose were in no way related...)
I love what Danny Boyle has done with the Bollywood genre.
I recommend that you see this movie as soon as it's out in the UK!
prob the worst film iv ever seen,dont feed into the hype.its poor!
I saw this in the cinema last night and was disappointed. Slumdog Millionaire is colourful, with an impressive frenetic energy, but is bursting at the seems with terrible clichés.
The central Kane-and-Abel gangsta story is hackneyed and predictable, complete with earnest confrontations atop unfinished tower blocks (cue sunglasses, much smoking, and lines like look down there brother the slum where we grew up) and love triangle with beautiful street-urchin-turned-prostitute-turned-gangsters- moll. There isnt much you dont see coming a mile off.
A lack of real dramatic tension means that when director Danny Boyle isnt reverting to the aforementioned cliché, he has to bombard us with pop-video editing and an almost constantly thumping sound track. I could have done with about three fewer of the would-be adrenaline fuelled chase sequences that seemed to occur about every ten minutes.
The fact that many of the events, including the central game-show premise, are completely implausible shouldnt be a problem its a movie after all. But Boyle failed to make me believe them, so the whole thing came over as plain daft.
On the plus side theres some very cute kids (who manage to steal the show despite having to say, in all seriousness, lines like it is our destiny) and some fantastically shot action sequences in the first hour. One of these - a violent sectarian raid on the slum - was the point I felt most engaged with the story, despite one of the attackers shouting out some daft line like Lets get these Muslims! The heady environment (you can almost smell it) of the Mumbai slum is one thing Boyle realises brilliantly.
If not my recent trip to Mumbai and Delhi I could not judge this movie on it's factual value.
The slum story is so true and realistic that watching it was like having a deja vu. What I love about this movie is that it is not hiding anything from you. You can see real India, without any touch-ups typical for Hollywood productions. Please do not expect anything similar to Darjeeling Limited (so unrealistic movie) because you will get disappointed.
The plot is good and happily enough not in a Bollywood style. Really worth watching but be aware that some scenes may be disturbing for someone who never visited a 3rd world country.
Did I just see the same film as everyone else?!
This has to be the most overrated film in history!
In lieu of anything else half decent in 2008 this film has swept the board for just about every award almost including best cleaning lady. But what a let down. It's limp, predictable, thoroughly unoriginal and twee. It may as well be called: 'Danny Boyle Goes to India'.
Yawn!
Oscar winning drama, about an 18 year-old orphan from the slums of Mumbai, who is just one question away from winning the jack-pot on India's "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? He is arrested on suspicion of cheating and tells the story of his life to prove his innocence. read more »
Danny Boyles Slumdog Millionaire is a film so upbeat and colourful that, by the time youre relaying its... read more on Time Out