Hotel Mumbai Movie Review: Dev Patel, Anupam Kher's Film Recreates the 2008 Horror in the City
Hotel Mumbai Movie Review: Dev Patel, Anupam Kher's Film Recreates the 2008 Horror in the City
Anthony Maras's Hotel Mumbai on the 2008 terror attacks in what is termed with a lot of pride India's most professional city and financial capital premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2018.

Hotel Mumbai

Director: Anthony Maras

Cast: Dev Patel, Anupam Kher, Armie Hammer

Anthony Maras's Hotel Mumbai on the 2008 terror attacks in what is termed with a lot of pride India's most professional city and financial capital premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2018. It opened in some parts of the world earlier this year, but its India release – for some inexplicable reason – happens now, November 29 – more than a year after its premiere.

Dev Patel and Armie Hammer topline a plot set on those frightfully bloody nights in 2008 – when Mumbai was under siege in November 2008. The carnage went on for four days – when 10 members of the Laskar-e-Taiba carried out a shooting and bombing spree in eight different locations in the city. About 170 people died, including nine of the extremists. Over 300 people were wounded, some maimed for life. One of the most important points of the attack was the iconic Taj Mahal Hotel facing the Gateway of India. Maras's work confines itself to the hotel, and condenses the story to a single night. It is fictionalised but inspired by actual events, and at least one of the screen characters is real.

The movie captures most vividly how a wonderful holiday for some of the hotel guests turned from a dream into a nightmare. Also, the bravery on the part of some of the hotel employees who could have easily escaped but stayed on to help and save the guests is highlighted with a sense of authenticity. The staffers are not depicted as some sort of Spidermen or larger-than-life film heroes. And herein lies Hotel Mumbai's plus point.

On the other hand, a point of criticism can be that the movie may be somewhat removed from the actual events, avoiding a social and political commentary and taking the easy way out of conveying the triumph of good over evil. This approach may seem a little too bland.

The narrative is pretty straight forward. Among the hotel guests are the recently married couple, David (Armie Hammer) and Zahra (Nazanin Boniadi), whose baby is stuck upstairs with their nanny, Sally (Tilda Cobham-Hervey). There is a Russian businessman (Jason Isaacs) with a glad eye and a number of faithful hotel employees like the intelligent waiter, Arjun (Dev Patel), and the courageous head chef, Hemant Oberoi (Anupam Kher). Finally, we have the four extremists who are armed to the teeth and shooting at anyone who appears! Theirs is a cold-blooded operation.

The film tells us time and again that the SWAT team was 800 miles away in Delhi, and hence the delay in rescuing the hostages and also perhaps why so many died. First-time director Maras also weaves into his story the actual footage – although the movie was not shot in the Taj Mahal Hotel. But of course. A lovely set design by Steven Jones-Evans and cinematography by Nick Remy Matthews add to the brilliance of the work. Superb performances by Kher and Patel give the picture a sense of feeling.

Rating: 3.5/5

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