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Review: Netflix's The White Tiger is an engrossing tale of servant and master

Review: Netflix's The White Tiger is an engrossing tale of servant and master

The White Tiger more rigorously examines and subverts Hollywood (and Bollywood) stereotypes of Indian life.
Updated 25 Jan, 2021

Ramin Bahrani, the Iranian-American filmmaker, started out small, with the simple story of a pushcart vendor, a Pakistani immigrant selling coffee and doughnuts in New York, in 2005’s Man Push Cart. In the years since, his films have steadily grown in scale and melodrama, but they’ve stayed resolutely within the gap separating rich and poor.

Bahrani’s last film, 2014’s 99 Homes — a movie dedicated to Roger Ebert, who championed Bahrani’s early work — plunged into the heart of the Great Recession in a damning economic parable of foreclosure in Florida, with a titanic performance by Michael Shannon as a predatory real-estate broker. Bahrani’s latest, the India-set The White Tiger, is a step higher, still, in scope and vigour.

The White Tiger, available on Netflix, is the kind of widescreen epic of class struggle about an ambitious, cunning climber that has long been a rich domain of movies. Bahrani may have begun as a neorealist but The White Tiger finds him reaching for the operatic heights of Goodfellas.

He doesn’t get there. But The White Tiger, about a loyal chauffeur to a corrupt landlord in India, is an engrossing tale of servant and master that makes a dynamic portrait of the world’s largest democracy, and the caste system that divides it.

Spoilers ahead

The film faithfully and affectionately adapts Aravind Adiga’s 2008 Booker Prize-winning novel, a book that — since Bahrani and Adiga are longtime friends — was dedicated to Bahrani. We first meet Balram Halwai (Adarsh Gourav), as he sits in regal costume, in the back of a car speeding through Delhi in 2007 on a joyride cut short when a child walks into the road. It’s a misleading opening; Balram is the driver, and we’ll later learn it’s his boss' wife, Pinky (Priyanka Chopra Jonas), behind the wheel and his boss, Ashok (Rajkummar Rao), in the front seat.

Bahrani will return to this moment but not before a lengthy flashback that runs at least half of the film. Balram comes from the poor village of Laxmangarh, where his prospects are dim. With an ingratiating smile and some pandering, he convinces a wealthy landlord known as the Stork (Mahesh Manjrekar) to take him on as a driver. Balram narrates along the way, sharing his strategy for advancement while selling his story as reflecting a much-needed rebellion for India’s millions of poor. They are psychologically locked in a rooster coop, he says, too timid to rebel despite knowing their fate.

“Don’t believe for a second there’s a million-rupee game show you can win to get out of it,” says Balram.

It’s a pointed jab at the best picture-winning Slumdog Millionaire, a movie that — like The White Tiger — cast a bright spotlight on India’s underclass, but one that offered a more fantastical vision of escape. The White Tiger, it could be argued, isn’t so different as an against-the-odds success story. If Slumdog gave us the musical version of uprising in India, The White Tiger instead filters modern India through a crime drama like Scarface.

But The White Tiger more rigorously examines and subverts Hollywood (and Bollywood) stereotypes of Indian life. Balram, a self-made hero, capable of ruthlessness and selfishness, is a more complicated protagonist, worthy of empathy and scorn. In The White Tiger, he represents India’s future.

“The Indian entrepreneur has to be straight and crooked, mocking and believing, sly and sincere, all at the same time,” he says.

Watching Gourav pull off such a balancing act is the best reason to see The White Tiger. An actor and singer, Gourav’s charisma animates a film that otherwise can sag with heavy-handedness. Bahrani isn’t a director with a light touch, but, then again, he’s drawn to subjects that deserve bluntness.

Bahrani, with Paolo Carnera’s vivid cinematography, builds a dense, incisive film that nevertheless feels uneven in structure. The movie is so invested in the mentality of the slave-master relationship between Balram and Ashok, the landlord’s hipster son, that it overwhelms.

Almost as soon as Balram, through bloodshed and Machiavellian guile, achieves independence, The White Tiger is wrapping up. Maybe it’s too American a thing to say, but it skips over the best part.

Comments

Dhakaad Jan 25, 2021 12:14pm
I heard indian content was banned recently? How did you manage to watch it?
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alli Jan 25, 2021 12:42pm
indian violent protests are on the way? (against this movie's actors, directors, and all) !
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Zulfiqar Jan 25, 2021 01:26pm
@Dhakaad Its called the internet. You should try it sometime. It's really easy to use.
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John Jan 25, 2021 01:31pm
Stop watching Indian series, go watch dubbed Turkish fiction
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imzaso Jan 25, 2021 01:41pm
Brilliant peace, put together. I watched it yesterday on Netflix. I thought Pinky (Priyanka Chopra Jonas) was in driving seat and not the boss, Ashok (Rajkummar Rao).
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Ifti Malik Jan 25, 2021 01:43pm
The novel was very nice too.
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Adeel Abbas Jan 25, 2021 02:14pm
What a waste of time that movie was.
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Fuzail Z. Ahmad Jan 25, 2021 02:25pm
@Dhakaad, the Indian content on Netflix is not banned in Pakistan. There are occasionally good Indian films and shows available there.
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SATT Jan 25, 2021 02:46pm
Bollywood is banned in Pakistan.
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Usama Jan 25, 2021 03:18pm
@Dhakaad it's on netflix .. think about it!
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raheel Jan 25, 2021 03:27pm
I will not be watching this as it's poor quality viewing
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realist Jan 25, 2021 03:44pm
Why is indian media being promoted here?!
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Feroze Jan 25, 2021 04:58pm
I watched the film on Netflix in USA and found it worthy enough to watch it to the end. Priyanka chopra and Balaram Halwai were masterful in their roles. A movie wort watching.
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Adam Jan 25, 2021 05:04pm
After a long time, I have seen such rich content with most amazing story, and acting put together. The idea explained so well that it leaves you speechless even thinking about it. I would ask folks to really watch it, but again, I know in current India, it will be hard hit. These types of novels and then movies come after ages.
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Ravi Jan 25, 2021 06:47pm
Story has stereotypes, and looks like years behind. Caste system is there and mentality is also, but not as strong as shown in the movie.
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pakOne Jan 25, 2021 08:10pm
@imzaso You are a real 'peace' of work.
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Shridhar Subrahmanyam Jan 25, 2021 08:13pm
@Dhakaad It has not been banned. We are watching it right now! Movies on Netflix and Amazon Prime are not liable to be banned as they are for private viewing at home.
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Saeeds Jan 25, 2021 08:49pm
Good movie . The way it’s depicted the feeling of Slave mind set of subcontinent people. This is true the way we look westerner and politicians. Yes worshipping in our DNA
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Secular Jan 25, 2021 10:15pm
@realist This is Iranian product.
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shubs Jan 26, 2021 12:38am
@Secular "This is Iranian product." Really? Do you know who Ramin Bahrani is, where he lives and works, which nationality he is, and which country he calls home? Do you know who produced the movie? Do you know what language it is in?
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Rami Jan 26, 2021 07:05am
Yes white tiger, heard fair and lovey cream still a best seller in India !
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LAHORI KID Jan 26, 2021 08:21am
@alli It’s on NETFLIX, it’s a Netflix original
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Ss Jan 26, 2021 08:43am
@Zulfiqar ok so you learned. Wow.
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ahmad Jan 26, 2021 04:04pm
The only thing which hurts its authentic feel is the use of English language, just like Slum Dog Millionaire
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Dr. Gonorrhea,Aamir Ahmad Jan 26, 2021 05:44pm
very poor plot & screenplay... Its very average movie.. Director couldn't make it properly...
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Gulab Jan 27, 2021 01:00am
Hated the foul, abusive dialogues. Not worth it.
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Sheharyar Jan 27, 2021 01:42am
The movie is dark to its core. The tale of an unapologetic murderer-turned-entrepreneur who, due to his early age dilemmas and series of events with his masters, sees the world as a cage. The script is aptly written while the plot seems to be a shady one
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Pakistani in New Zealand Jan 27, 2021 04:17pm
@John You don't have to tell me that. Never going to watch it. Although, it was made by a non -Indian. I am just saying that.
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