I watched Lion last night, starring Dev Patel and Nicole Kidman. I think it is pretty much impossible to watch this movie without crying. It is based on the true story of Saroo Brierley who was lost as a boy at an Indian railway station then, as an adult living in Australia 25 years later, used Google Earth to find his mother.
Movie synopsis:
Wow, talk about an emotional movie! The performances from Kidman and Patel as grown up Saroo were great, but I think what stole the show for me was the acting of Sunny Pawar who acts as the 5 year old Saroo. The terror the child must have faced waking up on a deserted train station, and then having fallen asleep on a train, finding himself many miles away from his village and unable to articulate where he was from or his mother's name...all I can say is this little actor took me through every emotion as if I were a lost child myself.
What really hit me was the plight of so many homeless and orphaned kids, especially those staying in the walkway under the train station. The desperation in their eyes, oh my. I wanted to adopt them all right there and then. It reminded me of what the Cs said with regards to Indian children being used for nefarious purposes by 3D & 4D STS. This movie really brings home how lost and vulnerable these children are to multi-dimensional predators.
Well worth watching but do sit down with a box of tissues!
SPOLIER ALERT
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I loved how 5 year old Saroo's instincts kicked in when a seemingly nice lady took him in and seemed kind, but when her man walked in and sized him up, he knew something was off and fled. I would imagine they were going to sell him for sex, and it made me so angry. I have no words for despicable 'humans' like that.
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Movie synopsis:
Five year old Saroo gets lost on a train which takes him thousands of miles across India, away from home and family. Saroo must learn to survive alone in Kolkata, before ultimately being adopted by an Australian couple. Twenty five years later, armed with only a handful of memories, his unwavering determination, and a revolutionary technology known as Google Earth, he sets out to find his lost family and finally return to his first home.
Wow, talk about an emotional movie! The performances from Kidman and Patel as grown up Saroo were great, but I think what stole the show for me was the acting of Sunny Pawar who acts as the 5 year old Saroo. The terror the child must have faced waking up on a deserted train station, and then having fallen asleep on a train, finding himself many miles away from his village and unable to articulate where he was from or his mother's name...all I can say is this little actor took me through every emotion as if I were a lost child myself.
What really hit me was the plight of so many homeless and orphaned kids, especially those staying in the walkway under the train station. The desperation in their eyes, oh my. I wanted to adopt them all right there and then. It reminded me of what the Cs said with regards to Indian children being used for nefarious purposes by 3D & 4D STS. This movie really brings home how lost and vulnerable these children are to multi-dimensional predators.
Well worth watching but do sit down with a box of tissues!
SPOLIER ALERT
****************************************************************************************************************
I loved how 5 year old Saroo's instincts kicked in when a seemingly nice lady took him in and seemed kind, but when her man walked in and sized him up, he knew something was off and fled. I would imagine they were going to sell him for sex, and it made me so angry. I have no words for despicable 'humans' like that.
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