Slumdog Millionaire - A hit or miss among Indians? - Instablogs
Slumdog Millionaire - A hit or miss among Indians?
Somshuvra Mukerjee , Kolkata: Mar 16 2009
Made Popular Mar 17 2009
India :

Slumdog Millionaire - A hit or miss among Indians?

Slumdog Millionaire” is a hit across the world, but in India, protesters have taken to the streets to attack the film.

Some Indians find the word “slumdog” in the movie’s title to be insulting to slum-dwellers. More generally, the rags-to-riches romance has been called “poverty porn” for the way it casts a glowing light on a very poor section of Mumbai society and promotes “slum tourism.”

There has been quite a hullabaloo in India (and among Indians living outside the country) over the movie “Slumdog Millionaire”: people accusing it of being poverty porn, or balking at the fact that Danny Boyle, who is British, has created a film about slum life that ignores India’s recent economic prosperity. One of the more outraged complaints has been that the title of the movie is derogatory to people living in the slums. A lawsuit has also been filed demanding that the title be changed.

Back in the good old days when Satyajit Ray often made the most sublime neo-realistic cinema, one Ms. Nargis Dutt caustically charged him with selling Indian poverty abroad. Yet, Satyajit Ray”s
films did not feature Calcutta”s slums but the villages of Bengal. There was an undercurrent of poverty in his major films like Pather Panchali, Aparajito and Pratidwandhi but there was human irony. No romanticizing poverty yet ultimately a resounding affirmation of human dignity.

Through the vicissitudes of times, India has emerged as a global economy shedding both its Nehruvian rate of growth and the associated stereotypes, although we are admittedly a third world country with sub Saharan level hunger and human development indices. Yet, a share of its misfortune may be attributed to being surrounded by two failed states whose burdens of jihadi terrorism and poverty India has to suffer. Even the slum is an artificial socio-political construct and misrepresents Indian poverty.

Indian slums have unpaid electricity accounts yet even today thousands of Indian villages wait electrification; slums have NGOs operating in vain while villages still await their first permanent school buildings. Slums create and sustain criminals yet millions of Indian villages represent a morally and ethical superior way of life and hospitality. Slums in India are infested by some over 30-40 million illegal Bangladeshi migrants who constitute a sizable secular votebank.

But no matter who says what we have to admit the fact that the movie made us proud. It was indeed a proud moment for India as the entire nation woke up to the good news of the triple haul of Oscars.

A R Rahman created history by becoming the first Indian to win two Oscars for the Best Original Score Slumdog Millionaire and Best Original Song Jai ho and sound engineer Resul Pookutty won the third trophy of the day by winning the award for sound mixing for Slumdog Millionaire. “Before coming here, I was excited and terrified. The last time I felt that way was when I was getting married,” said A R Rahman in his acceptance speech after bagging the Original Score award. Rahman was back on the dais again to accept the Oscar for the best Original Song for the number Jai ho rendered by Sukhwinder Singh and Mahalakshmi Iyer.

The Mumbai-based rags-to-riches romance, Slumdog Millionaire stole the show at the Oscar Award ceremony by winning as many as eight awards out of 10 nominations including Best Film, Best Director award for Danny Boyle, Best Original Song and Original Score for A R Rahman, Best Sound Mixing for Resul Pookutty, Ian Tapp and Richard Pryke and Best Adapted Screenplay for Simon Beaufoy.

Earlier, the sole Oscar glory for India was won by costume designer Bhanu Athaiya a good 26 years ago in 1983 for Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi.

It had also won the Golden Globe Awards for best drama, best director (Danny Boyle), best screenplay (Simon Beaufoy) and best original score (A.R. Rahman).

India’s music maestro Allah Rakha Rahman had also scooped the BAFTA award in the best music score category for Slumdog Millionaire ; it also won six other awards, including the Best Film at the star-studded function in London.

So, no matter what we say, we have to admit that the movie Slumdog Millionaire has made us proud and we Indians have mixed reactions regarding it.

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Somshuvra Mukerjee
Mar 16 2009
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Somshuvra Mukerjee
Mar 16 2009
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Somshuvra Mukerjee
Mar 16 2009
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1 Stars
Ranjit Raman
Kolkata, India
Well written. Its like the India we know. Always creating a hype over things which do not belong to them. Lets not forget, it took a foreigner to make a movie on India’s greatest icon - Gandhi. Same with Slumdog. I wonder if it would hv been the case, had it been made by a Ram Gopal Varma or any Indian for the matter. But yes, hats off to Rahman for making it to the list of India’s Oscar winners, although I would never call the music amongst Rahman’s best. Anyways - for the time being its...Jai Ho !!!
1 Stars
Nautty
Islamabad, Pakistan
"The success of Slumdog Millionaire has boosted an unlikely niche market in tourism: the slum tour."
1 Stars
John
New York, United States
this movie is great though, watched it on saturday. Prolly one of the best films I've seen in many years. The part where Kid Jamal jumps in the outhouse hole is prolly one of the funniest things I've seen in a movie, however, it also kinda made me sick.
1 Stars
Michael
London, United Kingdom
I've been to Mumbai many times and the sad part is that those pictures don't even come close to showing the worst of it.
1 Stars
Dante
Manila, Philippines
I love this movie! I live in the Philippines and whatever you see in the movie, is also present from where I live! From slums, toilet by the sea, beggar who have been owned by crime syndicates, theives and gangs!
1 Stars
Matt
Liverpool, United Kingdom
I loved this film. Well... I loved all of Danny Boyle's films. Trainspotting, 28 days later, Sunshine... all movies that I highly recommend. He's my favorite director, and well, I have to say... this movie really is awesome
1 Stars
Kate
Brisbane, Australia
"I don't want to sleep on the floor anymore. I want a proper bed and live where the air does not smell of poo. I have seen what it is like in America. Here, there is garbage everywhere, people get angry, swear and shout. I have realised how bad life is here. I just want to get out."
1 Stars
Kenneth
Chicago, United States
But one thing people need to keep in mind is that Bollywood doesn't really make movies like this. Their movies are often upbeat and fairy-tale-ish. So I can understand why they are freaking out over such a change.

But still, they need to chill out. All countries have slums. Get over it.
1 Stars
@Kenneth

First see more Bollywood movies.

The movie has nothing to do with ”change” but it’s reflection of distorted Western Mindset .
1 Stars
Kenneth
Chicago, United States
Just because your country is poor, doesn't give you the right to tell us we cant enjoy your poverty.
I'm a horrible person.
(Global Perspectives)
1 Stars
Arman
Dallas, United States
I consider myself a pretty cultured person, and the reason this film was so powerful to me is because I had not once considered this type of crime, poverty, and economic contrast in India. It exists just about everywhere else so I guess I shouldn't have been surprised, but having it gift wrapped and delivered the way it did in this film made me go home and order a pile of books on modern Indian culture and politics.

Insulting name maybe...but many considered "Raisin In The Sun" insulting, but raised awareness of race issues across the board for everyone who watched it.
1 Stars
Sherif
Brisbane, Australia
What a waste of time protesting a movie like this when they should be protesting Bollywood for glamorizing their caste system. You are only beautiful in India if your skin is light, all their magazines and films only show light skinned people. They would rather have a movie where everyone lives in a mansion and have fairy tale love stories, with plots ripped from hollywood movies.
1 Stars
Aneez
Mumbai, India
Very well said, Sherif. You have stepped on the toe. Actually, as someone else said earlier in the comments,

Always creating a hype over things which do not belong to them.

Its really sad that we skip more important topics like caste and color based discrimination and raise a hornets nest over such things.

Finally, Slumdog Millionaire is a well-made film which shows fact. So there’s no point shouting foul. What actually needs to be done is to try and erase the slums.

Interestingly, those who are bashing Danny Boyle (for showing the reality) are not at all bothered about discussing the real issue.
1 Stars
Sanwali
Shimla, India
Most Bollywood movies are shot in switzerland. Slumdog keeps it REAL. Not fairy mountains in switzerland with people dancing & singing every few seconds.
1 Stars
Shirley
Calgary, Canada
True!

I also don't understand why people are criticizing this movie along these points. It's a really simple story with a happy ending. If we really want to compare it, perhaps the best thing we can/should say is that it can be an inspiration for people living in slums.
(Global Perspectives)
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