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"Lion" is the kind of inspirational movie I
normally shy away from but first-time director Garth Davis treats the
material with a harder edge than I expected. The potential for
sentimentality is, of course, high in this true story of a five year old
Indian boy separated from his family by 1600 kilometers when the train
he is sleeping in 'accidentally' takes him to Calcutta forcing him to
live on the streets until a kindly Australian couple, (Nicole Kidman and
David Wenham), adopt him and raise him to adulthood in Tasmania.
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As
a child he is played by the remarkable Sunny Pawar and as an adult by
the equally remarkable Dev Patel in a film full of fine performances.
The tragedy of the early scenes are that they will immediately remind
you of Dickensian London, (complete with a Fagin and a Nancy), though
mercifully these children encounter as much goodness as they do evil.
This is, after all, a film about hope
.
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Of course, one of the
risks involved when Western filmmakers make movies in such 'exotic'
locations as India is the temptation to prettify them out of all
recognition. This is fine in a movie like "The Best Exotic Marigold
Hotel" but a movie like this needs to look at least more 'realistic' and
Greig Fraser's excellent cinematography does go some way to rectifying
the problem; there is a darkness here, literally and metaphorically.
Ultimately this is a moving and intelligent picture that could easily
have been so much less; a film in which even the obligatory romantic
entanglements, (here involving a fine Rooney Mara), work. Hardly Best
Picture material but worth seeing nevertheless.
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