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A JBO Reel Review of: The White Tiger (2021)

May 10, 2024 | JBO | 0 comments

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A JBO Reel Review of: The White Tiger (2021). The White Tiger is as smart as it is silly. As harrowing as it is hilarious. As intelligent as it is entertaining. In other words, it’s on the hunt but it’s happy just to play.

The White Tiger is as smart as it is silly. As harrowing as it is hilarious. As intelligent as it is entertaining. In other words, it’s on the hunt but it’s happy just to play.

Based on Aravind Adiga’s 2008 novel of the same name, The White Tiger tells the story of Balram, a poor Indian villager who, through gut and guile, claws his way to the top of the food chain.

The White Tiger Hunts in a Capitalist-Caste System

While I can’t speak for the book—I haven’t yet read it but I’ll definitely be cracking the cover after watching the film—The White Tiger eschews political correctness in favour of incisiveness.

A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)

It is unabashed in its depiction of the remnants of the Indian caste system and how that system has evolved in a modern world with a globally-based and capitalist economy. Similarly, the film is unapologetic in its portrayal of Western weakness as a result of the excesses brought on by that same modern economy.

Writer and director, Ramin Bahrani, expertly tied all of these cultural and social themes together tightly in a familiar tale of class struggle. While audiences may be a little tired of films that are so heavily focused on class divisions—as if the real world doesn’t offer us enough of that already—The White Tiger benefits from its candor.

The film displays the moral corruption of the rich and the poor alike without taking any sides. It is less of a populist battle cry or conservative defense and more of a scathing indictment of the rules of the jungle and what can happen when we abandon the thin veneer of civilization.

A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)
A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)

In The White Tiger, it isn’t the strongest that survives; only the hungriest and most savage beast who is crowned king.

At the same time, it’s also just a good watch. If you aren’t terribly concerned with all of the heady, academic themes, then The White Tiger is also just full of humour and drama.

The White Tiger Is Fun and Playful

Balram (Adarsh Gourav) is a scintillating anti-hero. Though the film is narrated by and filtered through Balram’s perspective, an expert use of the first-person past tense gives us some distance from him. Just enough distance to be objective. While you can’t help but judge Balram for his shortcomings, he is still a sympathetic character. And that’s all down to Adarsh Gourav’s performance.

Gourav makes for a great Balram. While his character lacks the pyrectics of Jake Gyllenhaal’s Lou Bloom from 2014’s Nightcrawler, it’s a fair comparison to make.

A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)
A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)

Where, thanks to the nature of its singularly focused script, Gyllenhaal had the opportunity to openly express the innermost thoughts bouncing around in Lou Bloom’s troubled head, Gourav doesn’t have the same space to work with. Instead, even despite the narration, Gourav has to hint at Balram’s deepest, most secretive thoughts and does so with an impressive range of microexpressions.

Even as Gourav narrates Balram’s thoughts, there’s just enough doubt in the flicker of his eye that you don’t believe he is actually capable of what he says he will do. Until he does it.

It isn’t clear that fellow co-stars Priyanka Chopra and Rajkummar Rao had the same challenges that Gourav had but they were equal to their tasks and particularly well-cast for their roles.

There’s definitely some praise for cinematographer Paolo Carnera whose camera work did much of the storytelling. But if you’re looking for the opulent and ornate shots customary in the eastern tradition of filmmaking, you aren’t going to get that here. Carnera was primarily concerned with contrasting the grit and dirt of Balram’s jungle-world with the steel, glass and polish of the civility he seeks to attain. Trading beautiful shots for smart ones works particularly well for Carnera and for this film.

A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)
A family gathers in The White Tiger (2021)

Rich men are born with opportunities they can waste.

The choice of music is also smart and acts like the killing blow for Bahrani’s excellent direction.

So, whether you want to watch something intelligent or just laugh and then be horrified, The White Tiger can be the king of your Netflix night. Just, you know, watch out for the claws.

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Brendan Da Costa is an award-winning short story writer, poet, novelist, content writer and (very, terribly opinionated) blogger.

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