The link these credits establish between the adoption story and the discourse around disadvantaged Indian children is worth considering. He becomes one of India’s lost children-one of the 80,000 gone missing every year, according to the film’s credits, which invite the viewer, albeit indirectly, to help such children. In short, he cannot be helped, and no one seems willing to help a lonely child wandering through the indifferent crowds at the train station and streets of Calcutta. He does not speak Bengali, nor does he know his mother’s name he mispronounces the name of his hometown and his own name. Disoriented, Saroo boards an out-of-service train that takes him to Calcutta-hundreds of miles away from home. Guddu leaves sleeping Saroo on a bench at the train station while he goes off to work, but he never comes back to pick up his younger brother because, as we find out at the end of the film, Guddu is hit by a train that night. He follows his older brother, Guddu, to yet another odd job that helps them provide for the family, but he is too exhausted to work after a long train ride. Saroo’s journey begins when his poor but happy life with a mother and siblings is disrupted by an accident. Scott of The New York Times, concur that the emotionally charged film “succeeds without feeling too manipulative or maudlin.” And yet a significant number of reviews, Scott’s included, remain skeptical of the narrative’s sentimental thrust, which downplays the complexities of Saroo’s story but showcases evidence of the miraculous salvation and the happy reunion facilitated by Google.1 The critics, like Scott and likely the viewers- especially those involved with adoption-remain wishing for more texture in this representation of Saroo’s experience. Lion has been nominated for various awards, and the majority of its reviews have recognized this story of a lost-and-found child as a “feel-good crowd-pleaser,” a contemporary Odyssey with an emotionally satisfying happy ending (Debruge).
The film is based on the memoir A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley with Luke Davies. As an adult, Saroo (Sunny Pawar as a child and Dev Patel as an adult) locates and reunites with his Indian family. Reviewed by Marina Fedosik Lion, directed by Garth Davis, is the adoption story of Saroo, a fiveyear -old Indian boy accidentally separated from his birth family and adopted by a Tasmanian couple, Sue and John Brierley (Nicole Kidman and David Wenham). In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:ġ10 Lion.