Sunday, July 7, 2013

[In Theaters: REVIEW] MIDNIGHT'S CHILDREN (8/10)


Midnight’s Children, which was paired down from a 466-page book to a 146-minute film is structurally an excellent, accessible and ambitious work that maybe bites off a little more than it can chew. Spanning three generations in the history of colonial and post-colonial India (and the further fragmentation of the country into Pakistan and Bangladesh) - the film is vibrant, colorful and fascinating.

Central to the narrative is the family of Saleem Sinai (Satya Bhabha) – one of “midnight’s children”, he’s born just as India gains independence, haunted by the voices of the other children of midnight. The novel's author, Salman Rushdie serves as the story’s narrator. Directed by Deepa Mehta, a noted critic of Indian society and norms (including her powerful trilogy Fire, Earth and Water), her work also examines the role of Indians in Canadian society including Heaven on Earth and her light Toronto-set comedy Bollywood/Hollywood. Rushdie is an apt colloborators, in a story that seems less critique and really more magical realism: tracing the childhood and coming of age of Saleem – who was switched at birth. Actually the son of peasants, he’s switch at birth with Shiva – who is sent into a life of poverty, when the truth is revealed Saleem is sent to live with his aunt and uncle in Pakistan – witnessing the birth of a nation by military rule. His mother (played by Shahana Goswami) struggles with her own sexual issues including her own liberation causing a rift in her marriage (especially as we’ve seen the origin of this marriage earlier in the film).

The film is an awfully complex weaving of themes as fragmented, complex and ripe with contradictions as the nation it chronicles. Critics have accused it as a “mythification” – and perhaps it is a film intended for a Western audience (a good chunk of the film is spoken in English after all). Perhaps compressing the novel into a film that does race over key moments in history is doing the novel a disservice, but this is cinema: Midnight’s Children might have made for a more effective mini-series. While Slumdog Millionaire chronicled deep contradictions (that would allow for slums next to high rise office and residential towers), Midnight’s Children plays as a prequel of sorts. The film is far from perfect, epic in scope and overflowing with ideas - - in a summer filled with over bloated mindless entertainment this is a refreshing art house outing as imperfect as it is.

It goes without saying the film is beautifully shot and technically rather astounding: it suffers from, although that is the point, a mandate. The children of independence are also with a mixed candidate inspired by the baggage of the colonial era – the moral of the story is one cannot escape the complexities of history, both personal and national – even as they make history. 

Screening: Dipson Amherst Theatre



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