"Slumdog Millionaire" Greeted With Indifference In Mumbai Slums

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ERIKA KINETZ | January 23, 2009 07:55 PM EST | AP

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'Slumdog Millionaire' director Danny Boyle, left, and actors Shabana Azmi and Anil Kapoor dance as they arrive for the premiere in Mumbai, India, Thursday, Jan. 22, 2009. India's film industry celebrated Thursday as "Slumdog Millionaire" lived up to its rags-to-riches theme, receiving 10 Oscar nominations. The film, set amid the poverty of Mumbai's notorious slums, continued its surprise run of success since it swept its four categories at the Golden Globes, including the prize for best drama. The film got the second highest number of nominations, including best director for Danny Boyle, best picture and two of the three song slots. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade)

MUMBAI, India — "Slumdog Millionaire" was made about the people of Mumbai's teeming slums, but it was not made for them.

In the squalid shantytowns of Nehru Nagar, where parts of the Oscar-nominated film were shot, there was little of the excitement that has swept India since the low budget film emerged from obscurity to win four Golden Globes and 10 Oscar nominations.

Many of the slum's residents greeted Friday's India release of the movie with indifference. Most had never heard of the Academy Awards, and the neighborhood Hindi-language theater had no plans to screen the Hindi version of the film, "Slumdog Crorepati."

"We don't even talk about it," said Shabana Shaikh, 39, who lives in Nehru Nagar _ a warren of small houses and shops built of brick, corrugated metal, cement and tarpaulins in northern Mumbai.

Shot on a modest $14 million budget, "Slumdog Millionaire" tells the alternately heartwarming and horrific tale of Jamal Malik, a street orphan in Mumbai whose pursuit of love carries him to triumph on India's version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire."

Directed by British filmmaker Danny Boyle with visceral cinematography and fluid edits, the film draws the viewer into the squalor but ends with unexpected hope.

Slumdog's rattling iron roofs and sick-sweet sewers, its pickup cricket games, clucking chickens, and dirty teal barbershops are all here in Nehru Nagar. There are impish boys, the constant buzz of commerce, sleeping dogs, one-eyed cats, and, up high, endless lines of tired laundry.

In real life, however, things are slower and hotter, the streets are more broken and the smells _ of dirt, defecation, death _ are stronger.

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For the residents of Nehru Nagar, such stuff is not cinematic, it is home.

And most of them rarely go to movies.

The price of a ticket, which ranges from 60 rupees to 120 rupees ($1.22 to $2.44) at theaters near Nehru Nagar, is too steep.

"Will you give us tickets?" said Regina Munshi, a mother of three whose husband makes about $3 a day as a driver. "On that money, you can't take five people to the movies."

When they do go, they prefer the prefer the Bollywood staples of rich guys, gangsters and big song-and-dance numbers, not the grim reality of their daily lives.

The few who are drawn to the film say it's only because they love the music of composer A.R. Rahman, who was nominated for three Oscars, and because they are fans of the movie's two Indian stars, Irrfan Khan and Anil Kapoor.

Or, they had personal reasons.

Rafik Shaikh, a 37-year-old bus driver, said the filmmakers shot a scene in his home. He doesn't know much about the Oscars, but he's keen to see it.

He said he hopes to catch sight of the family dog, which died a few months after filming.

He said he was proud to show off his single room, with its chipping lime walls, neat folded blankets, and rows of stainless steel pots that his bride brought as a dowry.

"I was more than happy to show off the reality here," said Shaikh, sitting on his narrow bed with his daughters, two round-faced girls with braids. "I was happy my house would be seen."

Bootleg DVD's of "Slumdog," which have been selling fast in more prosperous areas, have not made their way through Nehru Nagar's tightly packed lanes of single-room homes and fly-covered garbage dumps.

Still, many are familiar with the broad outlines of "Slumdog Millionaire": A child of their own streets makes it big. And this is a theme they can embrace, particularly the kids that run barefoot down small, sun-flecked alleys.

Two dozen kids stood around, grooming a dirt field for a game of cricket as the afternoon sun settled behind piles of burning garbage.

Nearby, Ajit Devender, 11, the son of a rag-picker, practiced taking brave, flying leaps off a brick wall that gives onto an airstrip behind the slum, mimicking a scene at the beginning of "Slumdog Millionaire."

He saw the filming of the movie and said he would try to go to the theaters to see Hollywood's take on his home.

"If I have money, I'll go," he said. "Even I would like to be a millionaire."

MUMBAI, India — "Slumdog Millionaire" was made about the people of Mumbai's teeming slums, but it was not made for them. In the squalid shantytowns of Nehru Nagar, where parts of the Oscar-nomi...
MUMBAI, India — "Slumdog Millionaire" was made about the people of Mumbai's teeming slums, but it was not made for them. In the squalid shantytowns of Nehru Nagar, where parts of the Oscar-nomi...
 
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- Hare I'm a Fan of Hare 29 fans permalink
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I just saw the movie. I hope it gets many awards. I understand the feeling many indian people might have about what the movie shows. Hpw many of the Bollywood movies ever made are fair and balanced? The difference between this one and the other indian brand movies is that this one shows the part Indians don’t deal with at all. There is a lot to India and this is just one aspect, viewers understand this. For many indians who want to show only their best side this can be reasonable upsepting but there is no need to be. When one is so involved in one’s own culture it is hard to be objective. Remember our cultures are usually seen clearer from the eyes of outsiders

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 02/08/2009
- NoToGOP08 I'm a Fan of NoToGOP08 8 fans permalink

As long as India chooses to ignore its villages and continue its path to industrialization, the rural millions will continue to pour into urban areas. Slums only get bigger and more crowded. They represent a major voting block, so the politicians won't do anything about it. It is a vicious circle that will never end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:08 PM on 01/25/2009
- Ides I'm a Fan of Ides 21 fans permalink

My dad grew up in a third-world country in a village with no paved roads nestled in the jungle. When he saw Slumdog Millionaire, he cried. Says it was one of the most beautiful movies he's ever seen.

The indifference to the movie could be the fact that no one has even heard of it there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 01/25/2009

As someone whose family experienced serious poverty before we immigrated to the US (albeit not in the Mumbai slums) I can tell you that there is lower-lying fruit that people there have to deal with than a movie. Not surprising at all...

Good article.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 01/25/2009
- TheBaffler I'm a Fan of TheBaffler 44 fans permalink
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This might even be worse than Trainspotting. But the middle-brows and semi-informed hipsters love it, it's their flavor of the month, along with Aronofsky's latest bowel movement. Boyle, Tarantino, Coens, Nolan, Aronofsky, Fincher...we are in an era of faux-edginess, of empty, fatuous flicks, big on attitude and bathos, utterly lacking pathos and insight.

To those who think this is daring filmmaking, do yourselves a favor and check out the films of Tsai Ming-liang, Bela Tarr, Manoel de Oliveira, Jia Zhang-ke, The Dardenne Bros., Albert Serra, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Ousmane Sembene, Abba Kiarostami, Edward Yang, Nuri Bilge Ceylan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 01/24/2009
- TheBlackCat I'm a Fan of TheBlackCat 251 fans permalink
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I really like Nolan, Boyle, and Tarantino. I loved Slumdog Millionaire.

I agree there are much more daring films out there, largely unwatched. But I don't like Nolan or Boyle or Tarantino because they are edgy or daring, nor am I a hipster. I'm a big comic book geek, and these directors have styles that is very remniscent of Vertigo and indie comics. That's what I personally like about them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 01/25/2009
- TheBaffler I'm a Fan of TheBaffler 44 fans permalink
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I'm a big comic fan, too, and agree that some of those directors' styles are reminiscent of Vertigo and other faux indie comics. But I hated those kinds of comics for exactly the same reason I hate the films of the people I cited: they're empty, flashy, faux-edgy exercises in attitude. Neil Gaiman, Grant Morrison, et al. are indeed the vapid comic equivalents of Nolan and Tarantino.

Much more worthy are the comics by R. Crumb, Chris Ware, Jim Woodring, Charles Burns, Lynda Barry, Chester Brown, Kim Deitch, Joe Sacco.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 01/25/2009
- TheBlackCat I'm a Fan of TheBlackCat 251 fans permalink
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And I don't like the Cohen brothers because I think they are daring or edgy either. They make me laugh. End of story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 01/25/2009
- TheBaffler I'm a Fan of TheBaffler 44 fans permalink
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Raising Arizona is terrific. Blood Simple is also worthwhile. It's more recently that the Coens have fallen off the deep end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:03 PM on 01/25/2009

Saw this film today, and it is really an amazing experience. It's suspenseful, it's tragic, it's funny, it's sweet, it's frightening.

We'd seen "The Wrestler" last weekend and loved it. This was even better. Everyone should see this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 PM on 01/24/2009
- Samalabear I'm a Fan of Samalabear 64 fans permalink
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I did love this movie that I saw on Christmas Day. I was so affected by the grinding poverty and I'm glad it's being seen by so many. It should touch people around the world, as shows like "The Wire," should affect America at all levels. These locations are real, and no matter what else you take from this, the lives of the people living in these areas are real and they don't end after a 90-minute movie or a 60-minute show. They live this day in and day out. Life is very cruel.

I wish I knew what the answer is for India. It's not outsourcing our precious American jobs, that I do know. It's not H1B visas, which also hurts American jobs. If someone can shed light on this, I would like to know. Poverty anywhere is bad. Crushing the American middle class and grinding our poor down lower cannot be the answer to poverty in India, or China or anywhere else. In any case, the only people making money by doing this are corporate CEOs. We can see where that's going now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 01/24/2009
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Well for starters the Indian Govt and citizens need to take the poverty seriously and actually see it as a problem and a concern. They do not.

One of the wealthiest families in the world lives in Mumbai and a couple of years began construction of what will be the most expensive house in the world- a high rise building designed to be reminiscent of a luxury hotel , which is a favored lifestyle of the wife.It is however just for the family.IT's construction cost is in the billions.

Middle class or wealthy Indians do not see the poverty.The caste system and religion are be part of the reason for this as well as the high population -ONE BILLION.The Hindu and Jain religion, primary two with Islam being the third, stresses karmic debt ...so for them the circumstances of suffering are just karmic debt. There are also other ideas about reality not really being Reality and being a dream- so extreme suffering and death is not True.

I found it an amazing country but primitive in many regards.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 PM on 01/24/2009
- synergie I'm a Fan of synergie 2 fans permalink

what does the "caste system" have to do with anything? Or religion for that matter? The caste system is nothing more than the social divisions that are present in EVERY civilization. Blaming India's problems on that is part of the reason no one can approach the problems in a reasonable manner. India was gutted by 2 empires that both bled it dry, and ruined the governance systems that were in place for hundreds of years. Adding to that the educational system beat down the natives and introduced a self-hatred into the populace. The problem isn't religion, it isn't caste, it isn't "karmic debt", stop throwing around terms you're don't understand. It is political corruption, lack of education and sad phenomenon of seeing itself through the piteous eyes of ignorant foreigners.

It is am amazing country, and much more advanced than the so called 1st world in many regards as well. If you need a reminder of that go take a look at our own slums, but take some Kevlar with you, our slumdogs are rather better armed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 PM on 01/25/2009
- jazzblues I'm a Fan of jazzblues 6 fans permalink

brooklynci­tizen...Yo­u are a mo.R.on...and that too a big one. You are one of those hipsters who visit India once and read about it from books written by people who have absolutely no understanding of the country and...

your lack of understanding is pitiful...but your arrogance in touting your knowledge of an eastern upcoming nation is so full of pretentious stin.k. Please please go educate yourself...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 01/25/2009

India is one of the few countries untouched by Global Recession, primarily because of its very restrictive policies of Trade and Commerce Isolation from foreign trade and imports. Regrettably, this isolation, is also the very reason why 2/3 of its population is in dire poverty.

The top 1/3 are the elite ruling class - the very rich, connected and learned. India forgot its native son - Ramanujan, natural Mathermatical genius, even without formal education hailed by Oxford as the world greatest mathematician. Just maybe, 2/3 of neglected untap wealth of intelligence lies more Ramanujans. They must come out of the shackles of poverty. Shame of the highest order.

Indignations by ruling Indians to the word "slum dog", with due respect to my Indian room mate Mirzha, and Professor of Economics, is simply a false outrage. Slum Dog depicts India's worst sin - the entrenched poverty among 2/3 of it's citizen. It can not and must not be swept under the rugs.

But give Ceasar what is due Ceasar.

India with its rich heritage and undeniably great culture, is also the oldest and most sustainable democracy. But its most priceless resource is its people. I was bowled over by Mirzha's razor blade sharp brain - a walking lap tap. I suspect one can find an Indian among the best of the very best - be it science, technology, Math, Literature, and yes, even Cinema - Slum Dog.

It behooves India to come out of Trade Isolation. Here's to India !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 01/24/2009
- maikonen I'm a Fan of maikonen 9 fans permalink
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Tell me: What part does RELIGION play in perpetuating and perpetrating this grinding poverty?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:07 PM on 01/24/2009
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A lot. There is heavy reliance on religion-and the particular beliefs are enacted as indifference to the poor's circumstance.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 01/24/2009


Religion as a cause of poverty is a plausible explanation, NOT only in India but everywhere. You should know that India is a secular state.

My narrative pertains to Modern India. That religion, or interchageably, India's culture, is the thrust behind India's poverty is at best, a conjecture, by which I mean, a proposition presumed to be real, true, or genuine, but mostly based on inconclusive grounds.

I subscribe, for reasons of objectivity, to mathematical explanation by the International Monetary Fund, and the bottom up methodology used by United Nation in monitoring poverty in India and around the globe. You can always google IMF and UN for all their studies including their methodology by which they measure poverty level.

In summary, according to IMF, India is one of the few countries not affected by Global Recession, because of it's restrictive Trade, Economic, and International Commerce policies, but regrettably, it is also the very reason why 2/3 of its population is impoverized.

India's population is 1.5 billion, almost 5x the US, but only about 1/3 the size of US area. Mind boggling. India's natural resources - coal (fourth-largest reserves in the world), iron ore, manganese, mica, bauxite, titanium ore, chromite, natural gas, diamonds, petroleum, limestone, arable land. India prohibits foreign companies to operate and explore these resources, absence complete control by the Indian government. Instead, Indian depends of agriculture.

Try that for an answer.

Religion ? Hardly, not for Modern India.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:39 PM on 01/25/2009
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