By James Bowman on 12.22.08 @ 6:02AM
As a story about a poor boy who makes good, this widely acclaimed
Indian movie is pretty close to the traditional fairy tale.
The critical raves for Slumdog Millionaire -- directed
by Danny Boyle (Trainspotting; 28 Days Later)
to a screenplay that Simon Beaufoy adapted from a novel (Q &
A) by Vikas Swarup -- can hardly be unconnected with the fact
that its hero, Jamal (Dev Patel), the "slumdog" and lowly
"chai-wallah" who wins big on the Indian version of "Who Wants to
Be a Millionaire?" is Muslim, but secular, and is persecuted for
his ancestors' faith. His mother (Sanchita Choudhary) dies in an
anti-Muslim riot by Hindus, and he himself is tortured by the
police, who believe that a slumdog like him must have cheated to
have done so well on the TV show. But as a story about a poor boy
who makes good, the movie is pretty close to the traditional
fairy tale, with the multicultural romance superimposed upon it.
The latter also adds a special authenticity with a touch of what
strikes me as Islamic kismet. None of this description of the
picture should necessarily be construed as detracting from the
pleasure to be had from it.
There is also a connection with the recent terrorist attacks in
Bombay, the city in which most of the film is set and which is in
some ways as much its hero as Jamal. The latter's brother, Salim
(Madhur Mittal), tells him that, with the boom times that have
lately come to Bombay, "India is the center of the world, and I
am at the center of the center." Ostensibly, he is referring to
his duties as factotum to a notorious and socially prominent
gangster, Javed Kahn (Mahesh Manjrekar), but there is obviously
more than a little of the romance and pride of Indian prosperity
as Salim sweeps into his gaze the blossoming skyscrapers of
Bombay. In a way, India itself has won the world's "Who Wants to
Be a Millionaire?" contest and in doing so delighted guilt-ridden
Western liberals whose old ideas of India -- basically, Mother
Teresa, Calcutta, beggars, exotic religious practices, Taj Mahal
-- can now be amended appropriately.
All the same, Mr. Boyle and his collaborators seem to be relying
on the reality principle of the gritty, violent, impoverished,
corrupt world of the Bombay streets to cut, a little, the
euphoric excess of the feel-good story they are telling in order
to make it look authentic -- that is, depressing -- enough to
pass in the unforgiving world of structural movie realism. Fairy
tales are fine on the big screen, provided they can be made to
look something like real life. Therefore, to the extent that this
contrast between the sordidness of the slums and the magnificence
of Jamal's romantic ambition to track down Latika (Freida Pinto),
the love of his life -- oh, and by the way, to become a
millionaire along the way -- doesn't get too far out of hand, the
movie ought successfully to draw us in.
The trouble is that eventually, to my eye anyway, it does get out
of hand. Slumdog Millionaire turns out to be something a
little bit too much like the romantic equivalent of a superhero
movie. The implausibility of the central figure, who suffers
setback after setback but always wins in the end, is just too
great. There must always be in romantic comedy, I think, a hint
of destiny. You were meant for me; I was meant for you. But it is
crucial that the way the story is told should make this destined
union of the two lovers look believable. There are just too many
random and disappointing events in all our lives for the victory,
the happy ending, the romantic fulfillment to come too easily. It
is not enough, therefore, for Jamal to have suffered on the way
to his destiny. We must also believe that he could fail. And that
is where the movie lets us down.
Its central conceit, that all the seemingly hard and even
disastrous things that have happened to Jamal in his life, turn
out to have prepared him to answer just exactly the questions
that the quiz show asks him, by its very nature precludes
failure. The Western style destiny that comes seemingly by
accident when hope is exhausted is not for the slumdog. Rather,
the destiny he pursues is more of that exotic, fatalistic,
Islamic variety which utterly surrenders the freedoms of natural
man to the will of the Almighty. There is some attempt to build
suspense in the portrayal of the TV show, with its smarmy and
treacherous host (Anil Kapoor), as a framing device. But as each
question on the way to the jackpot leads to a flashback from
Jamal's life, explaining how this or that episode from his
dangerous and painful progress has prepared him to answer it, the
sense of something a little too magical for a grown-up movie is
hard to escape.
Mind you, it is now getting to the point where I almost feel that
it is pointless and unfair to criticize a movie for not looking
real. What movies, in the age of the superheroes and other
live-action cartoons, are even trying to look real? Why
criticize them for not doing what they never set out to do? If
that sounds to you a cogent reason for overlooking a trivial
defect -- or if you are the sort of post-modernist who sees no
defect at all and would be as offended by something that tried to
look real as I am by something that doesn't try to look real --
you will find lots to like in a movie that follows so closely the
classic Hollywood storyline of boy-gets-girl, boy-loses-girl,
boy-finds-girl-again. Meanwhile the spectacular vistas of Indian
life and landscape, the precarious existence of the slumdogs and
the old-fashioned belief in romance make it worth seeing even for
sticks-in-the-mud like me.