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Boyle hopeful Slumdog improves child stars' lives
British director Danny Boyle says he feels conflicted that his Oscar-winning film Slumdog Millionaire has distorted the childhoods of its young stars from Mumbai's shantytowns, but hopes the movie's huge success will improve their lives.
Shanghai: British director Danny Boyle says he feels conflicted that his Oscar-winning film Slumdog Millionaire has distorted the childhoods of its young stars from Mumbai's shantytowns, but hopes the movie's huge success will improve their lives.
The rags-to-riches story of an orphan from Mumbai's slums who becomes champion of the Indian version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire started out as a relatively small production but went on to make more than $350 million worldwide and win eight Oscars, including best picture and best director for Boyle.
The success made instant stars of the film's ensemble of child stars, but in particular changed the lives of Azharuddin Mohammad Ismail and Rubina Ali, 10-year-olds who grew up in the shantytowns where the film is set. The two children went from the slums to a jet-setting lifestyle of glamorous awards ceremonies and publicity appearances.
Boyle said on Friday in Shanghai, where he was serving as jury president at the 12th Shanghai International Film Festival, that he's mindful of the complications Slumdog created for Azhar and Rubina, but said he hopes the film did more good than harm.
"I'm conflicted constantly about it. I think ultimately it's right they were in the film," he said.
The filmmakers have drawn up an education plan and established a trust fund for the two children and hired a social worker to monitor their families. They also donated $747,500 to a charity devoted to improving the lives of Mumbai street children. When the two children's shanties were razed as part of a city slum-clearing campaign, the filmmakers and Indian government offered them new homes.
"Any way you can educate kids from those kind of circumstances, I think a lot of people agree is the cleverest, strongest, most sustainable way of trying to break their cycle of poverty that people are in in those kinds of communities. You've got to say it's a good thing," Boyle said, but adding that "real solutions will come in the end from Indians themselves".
"It won't come from some movie. It'll come from political change and development in the attitude of the government to its responsibility to its citizens and the provision of water, sanitation - basic human rights that are provided to people," he said.
Azhar and Rubina are frequently asked to make public appearances, and recently performed on TV in Hong Kong. Boyle said he and his fellow filmmakers would prefer that the families accept fewer invitations for such appearances because they distract the children from school.
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