Daily Star Sunday

THE WHITE TIGER

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15

On Netflix now

Writer-director Ramin Bahrani’s darkly comic adaptation of Aravind Adiga’s novel clearly owes a lot to Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionair­e.

But while both films follow a resourcefu­l young man trying to escape poverty in modern India, there’s nothing remotely feel-good about this beautifull­y shot satire.

To our hero and narrator Balram (Adarsh Gourav), modern India is a “rooster coop” where servile masses stupidly wait to be butchered and fed to the rich. We know Balram – who sees himself as a once-in-a-generation outsider or “white tiger” – makes it from the opening scene where, as a nattily attired entreprene­ur, he narrates his life story.

Balram tries to inveigle his way into the affections of Ashok (Rajkummar Rao), son of the corrupt coal baron who owns most of the land in his village. Ashok has just returned from America with a new wife (Priyanka Chopra) and seemingly liberal Western attitudes towards the lower castes.

We root for Balram when he talks his way into a job as Ashok’s chauffeur.

But there’s something deeply unsettling about him too. And when he begins to sense the hypocrisy of his glamorous master and mistress, his dark side begins to take over.

This tension keeps us hooked, though the pace sags a little in the middle, as we hurtle towards the pitch-black finale.

To the witty and now-worldly narrator, morality is a luxury of the rich. To escape the chopping block, an ambitious young man may need to wield a knife of his own.

 ??  ?? TENSION Adarsh Gourav as Balram with Ashok and his wife
TENSION Adarsh Gourav as Balram with Ashok and his wife

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