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The White Tiger plays like Netflix prestige CliffsNotes of an acclaimed bestseller

Film Reviews Movie Review
The White Tiger plays like Netflix prestige CliffsNotes of an acclaimed bestseller
Adarsh Gourav and Priyanka Chopra Jonas in The White Tiger Photo: Netflix

Note: The writer of this review watched The White Tiger on a digital screener from home. Before making the decision to see it—or any other film—in a movie theater, please consider the health risks involved. Here’s an interview on the matter with scientific experts.


“America is so yesterday,” enthuses Balram (Adarsh Gourav), and “India and China are so tomorrow.” He’s writing an email to Wen Jiabao, the premier of China, drawing a connection between the two nations ostensibly to pitch the visiting premier on his taxi business. But he’s also positioning his home country as an heir to America’s supposed upward mobility—one that can be even more selective, arbitrary, and cruel in laying out its narrow, nigh-impossible path to lasting success. This makes The White Tiger, based on the 2008 Booker Prize-winning novel by Aravind Adiga, a fitting adaptation for Iranian-American writer-director Ramin Bahrani. Bahrani has become a studious chronicler of American economic stagnation, using movies like Man Push Cart and 99 Homes to show people at work, digging into the hows and whys of failing to get ahead in a rigged system.

Balram would likely look upon many of Bahrani’s other characters with great envy. Born into a low caste, he has an aptitude for schooling that’s quickly shunted aside when he needs to contribute an extra pittance for his family and is sent to work as a child. He sees a possibility for escape through servitude; his grandmother agrees to let him leave their small village and pursue driving lessons, so that he can get a job playing chauffeur for a rich family and send most of his money home. That’s exactly what he does, and eventually finagles a plum spot with the more Americanized members of a wealthy clan: Ashok (Rajkummar Rao) and his largely U.S.-raised wife, Pinky (Priyanka Chopra Jonas). Balram travels with them to Delhi, where the couple stays in a posh hotel and he joins the parallel community of drivers and servants who dwell in the parking garage below.

The dynamic between Balram and his employers is sharply observed. The couple considers themselves more modern and enlightened than the rest of their family, insisting that Balram not call Ashok his “master,” and occasionally treating him something like a friend. At the same time, they take turns “encouraging” him with maximum condescension and sometimes outright berating him when they deem it necessary. Their supposed kindness is a convenience, and not to Balram. It’s all exacerbated by a mid-movie turn with overtones of The Great Gatsby, minus a mysterious figure of intoxicating charisma. Balram doesn’t need a Gatsby type to seduce him into a world of wealth; he gets starry-eyed at the sight of any meager opportunities that exist above the poverty line. To convey the lack of glamour, India isn’t shot with the usual western visual clichés; the skies frequently look overcast, and there’s barely a vivid orange-and-brown color scheme to be found. Delhi isn’t exoticized into a tourist brochure.

The White Tiger makes all of these plot and thematic checkpoints compelling while holding its material at a remove—and from a distance, only flashes of personality are visible (usually through the occasional expressive close-up). Bahrani has struggled on a bigger canvas before, notably with the sprawling, awkward melodrama At Any Price. Here, a novel provides a stronger spine, thickened by pages and pages of narration. The voiceover and quick pace lay the story out clearly, but they also expose how little affinity Bahrani has for the breathlessly energized, darkly funny, half-montage style employed by filmmakers who have tackled similar material, like Martin Scorsese or even Danny Boyle, whose Slumdog Millionaire will be an obvious point of reference for at least some American audiences. If that comparison seems facile, it’s one the movie itself cleverly makes, with a pointed aside about how no game-show prize awaits its hero.

Fair enough, but is Balram’s ending far less predictable? On the page, with more room to sink into its narrator’s psychology, maybe it is—or at least less preordained. Here, it takes Balram a full 90 minutes to verbalize his discontent with his selfish masters, and finally circle back to a bunch of metaphors he set up at the top of the movie to tip his hand (including, yes, a bit about the rare white tiger). Moreover, the narration repeatedly takes the reins away from Gourav’s acting, overtly explaining how Balram is feeling things like remorse or fear. There’s little of the intimacy of Bahrani’s best work, and while the book has been described as dark-humored, the movie feels more like a typical prestige adaptation, hitting the key themes and scenes without finding an independent tone. Despite its obvious currency, it’s more yesterday than tomorrow.

12 Comments

  • dollymix-av says:

    I remember liking the book, but I feel like that was largely due to the narrative voice and the very subjective perspective that went along with that. I’m kind of skeptical it would work as a movie.

    • bmglmc-av says:

      agree. After drowning in excess, i decreed that only the very best of English Indian literature shall cross my eyes, as book or as filum. I have been delighted by what’s gotten through –like this very book– and do not regret what i don’t bother to watch –like this very film.

    • akamoimoi-av says:

      I think it would work as a movie in the hands of a very edgy director like David Fincher (not to spoil anything, but my first impression of White Tiger was Indian Fight Club – it’s great). Bahrani is not a bad choice, but I wonder if the studio edited it to be more palatable and less dark. 

      • drabauer-av says:

        The film’s pretty dark, but not until the end; it should have gotten there earlier. A fair representation of the source, mainly due to the committed lead.

  • chronoboy-av says:

    Netflix tries so hard to be HBO it’s just getting sad at this point. For every Queen’s Gambit you get 10 Brights.

  • mrrpmrrpmrrpmrrp-av says:

    question for fans of the author: should I read White Tiger if I was just ok on Last Man in the Tower?

    • witheringcrossfire-av says:

      If you like a good book, full stop, I can’t imagine disliking The White Tiger.  It’s super readable and has a lot to say

      • proustable-av says:

        Honestly, I was a little surprised at how acclaimed it was after I read it. I’ll give it another chance, but I was very “meh” on it.

        • witheringcrossfire-av says:

          Well you know, we’ve all had critically acclaimed books/movies that just don’t do it for us or we feel are vastly overpraised.  

          • proustable-av says:

            True that.  But I’m doing a Booker Prize project (trying to read all the shortlists) and I did want to revisit it already.

          • witheringcrossfire-av says:

            Well in that case I think the movie coming out would be a perfect occasion to reread it!

  • cmartin101444-av says:

    Sounds like they’re really stretching out the origin story!
    Also, how is CBS on the second season of “The Unicorn”, and Walton Goggins hasn’t even got his powers yet?

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