It's OK, Suspend Disbelief

Even Dickens could never have imagined the torturous life of the slumdogs — the orphans of Bombay (now Mumbai).

   Two brothers, Salim and Jamal, are left to fend for themselves at an impossibly early age after their mother is killed in a random raid by anti-Muslim thugs.

   They lived in filth and squalor even before she died (to earn a few rupees they work as the gatekeepers to a makeshift outhouse on the top of a huge pile of garbage).

   After her death the boys pick out a living scavenging trash until they are rescued by Maman, the kindly proprietor of an orphanage.

   Subtlety not being this movie’s stock in trade, what ensues is entirely predictable, and I’m giving nothing away by revealing that Maman has plans for his lads and lasses that are certainly less than humanitarian.

   Despite this backdrop, “Slumdog Millionairesâ€� is far from grim.

   It’s fast, funny, and yes, uplifting — even old-fashioned in its insistence that if you are clever and good, you can rise above the worst of circumstances and, by the way, love will conquer all.

 The events of the boys’ early life are seen in flashback during a police interrogation. Jamal, now 18 and working as a “chai-wallaâ€� (tea boy) in a high-tech call center, has made his way onto the show “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,â€� and miraculously answered every question correctly until the penultimate round. The producers don’t believe that an uneducated nobody could know so much, and they subject him to a few hours of torture to force him to confess to cheating.

He manages, however, to convince them to let him explain how his life on the margins led him to know everything from the author of one of India’s best known songs (Maman at the orphanage forced the boys to sing it while begging) to the name of the president on the American hundred-dollar bill.

It’s a clever idea, and to tell the tale director Danny Boyle (and co-director Loveleen Tandon) takes the camera swooping from crowded slum to arid countryside to rapidly developing megacity, with a stopover at the Taj Mahal, where the two brothers, having escaped from the orphanage, have begun to perfect their skills as scam artists (taking a few of those Ben Franklins from American tourists) and petty thieves.

Salim, the older brother, takes to this life with greedy enthusiasm, but Jamal wants only to find and rescue Latika, the little girl who came with them to the orphanage but was unable to make the leap onto the train that took them away.  

He finds her, loses her, and finds her again, remaining doggedly loyal as she is shunted from a seedy brothel to become the concubine of a mobster.

The film swirls with color, music and pulsing rhythm, and doesn’t shy from the grimmest realities of the poor, and yet it all goes down easy because Salim, Jamal and Latika seem to sail through with minor damage.  

The ending is never in doubt, though Boyle effectively whips up the suspense as the TV show draws to a close.

There are a few holes — not the least of which is that Jamal himself, especially as played by Dev Patel in the teenage version, is a bit dull and one-dimensional.

The supporting actors, however, are more interesting: Irfan Khan, as the police interrogator, shows the same sly humor and depth as he did as the father in “The Namesake.� Anil Kapoor as the host of the game show is slick and interesting to watch as Jamal gets closer to the prize.

Does he want him to win?

Or not? The juxtaposition of the romantic Hollywood — or should I say Bollywood — ending requires more than the usual suspension of disbelief, but the energy and high good humor in the face of every kind of danger carries you through.

 â€œSlumdog Millionaireâ€� has just won four Golden Globe awards for best movie, best movie score, best screenplay and best director. It is coming soon to The Moviehouse in Millerton, NY. It is rated R for violence and terrible things happening to children.

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