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Lion 2016 123movies

Lion 2016 123movies

The search beginsNov. 24, 2016118 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Lion 2016 123movies, Full Movie Online – In 1986, Saroo was a five-year-old child in India of a poor but happy rural family. On a trip with his brother, Saroo soon finds himself alone and trapped in a moving decommissioned passenger train that takes him to Calcutta, 1000 miles away from home. Now totally lost in an alien urban environment and too young to identify either himself or his home to the authorities, Saroo struggles to survive as a street child until he is sent to an orphanage. Soon, Saroo is selected to be adopted by the Brierley family in Tasmania, where he grows up in a loving, prosperous home. However, for all his material good fortune, Saroo finds himself plagued by his memories of his lost family in his adulthood and tries to search for them even as his guilt drives him to hide this quest from his adoptive parents and his girlfriend. Only when he has an epiphany does he realize not only the answers he needs, but also the steadfast love that he has always had with all his loved ones in both worlds..
Plot: A five-year-old Indian boy gets lost on the streets of Calcutta, thousands of kilometers from home. He survives many challenges before being adopted by a couple in Australia; 25 years later, he sets out to find his lost family.
Smart Tags: #adoption #india #street_child #adoptive_mother_adoptive_son_relationship #mother_son_reunion #brother_brother_relationship #5_year_old #australia #boyfriend_girlfriend_relationship #adopted_child #calcutta_india #google_earth #language_barrier #lost_child #based_on_real_person #flashback #little_boy #kolkata #mother_son_relationship #foreign_adoption #based_on_true_story


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Ratings:

8.0/10 Votes: 237,121
84% | RottenTomatoes
69/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 5883 Popularity: 23.878 | TMDB

Reviews:


**Lost in India, found in Australia!**

Based on the book ‘A Long Way Home’ that tells the story of a young Indian boy who lost his brother in a railway station in the night and the next morning he woke up thousands kilometers away from home. Not knowing the language or the address and the names of his family, he struggled from various threats in the society. After that he got adopted from an Australian family and the rest of the film revolved on his true identity. Haunted by his past, how he rediscovered his originality was emotionally told.

Very impressive film. The families should not miss it. Even though it is a must see by all ages. I am not a big fan of Dev’s performances, even in his debut film ‘Slumdog Millionaire’. After that success, he had survived in the film industry doing decent roles, for like a decade. But it was ‘The Man Who Knew Infinity’ that changed his career. For the first time I liked him very much in that, and again he was pretty impressive in this. The second best performance in his career. Though his part comes only after the half way mark. Yet in that one hour, he did great, particularly in the sentiments.

I was wondering why it was called ‘Lion’. And I got answered only just before the end credit. So you should be patient to learn why, if you are yet to see it. It was not until the 90s the India began to see a real change. This story takes place in the mid 80s, only the opening half and those parts were raw and cruel, especially in the eyes of an 8 year old boy. That kid was so good. Just like Jacom Tremblay, a year before who impressed us with his performance from the film ‘Room’.

It was a feature film debut for the director and he was wonderful in this attempt. The film splits into two, the first half was about lost and the following half is about finding the road back to the home. Less dialogues, but well written in those necessary parts. The music was good. Only negative was the film was out of depth. Yeah, all the events were like fast forward. If they had focused on details, the narration would have reached at least 3 hours. Especially I wanted the Australian mother’s perspective on how she went through to raise those kids.

Now I’m waiting for the 2020. I mean 2008 was SDM, 2012 was LoP and 2016 was this one. The 4 years later, surely there will be another India related western film would come. Despite this film nominated for the 6 Oscars, it had won nothing. That’s very sad. Overall, I strongly suggest it. One of the best films of the Year.

_9/10_

Review By: Reno

An interesting true story. Film starts well and ends well. In the middle, there is a rapid acceleration from being a boy to being a man that misses out on a lot of an explanation as to how he ended up being the person he was. Quite boring in the middle of the film, which is a shame since the young actor was excellent.
Review By: djgri
Couldn’t stop crying
This is such a beautiful film, with a simple story line, without any frills.

A young Indian boy leaves their village with his older brother to do some “jobs”, in one of these jobs he gets lost and cannot find his way back home. Pass some years and he’s adopted by a family from Australia, and when that boy becomes an adult, he starts wondering where he’s actually from.

It deals with aspects of origin and identity, and that we cannot escape from who we really are.

Superb, superb acting from everyone, from the little Indian boys, specially Sunny Pawar that plays the young Sarro, to Dev Patel who has clearly matured into a top class act and is endearing and touching playing the older Saroo.

I’m certainly watching it again.

Review By: ian-70926
Waiting for Guddu…
Whenever I wander in the streets of the Moroccan Medina, I feel at home. There’s that strange mixture of various fragrances floating in the air: spices, kebab, frying delicacies (not much different from these appetizing jelabis), sea spray from the fish market, tanned leather from the shoe shop and this whole conglomerate smell outsiders or tourists might feel stinky, but as far as “my” senses are concerned, “there’s no place like home”. I didn’t pick it, it picked me.

And maybe there’s something innately circular about life, we’re born home, we move close or far from it, and there’s the need to get back. I even have a personal theory: that even your children can find a deep “connection” with the place you were born in, your home will also feel like home for them. And it is indeed “A Long Way Home”, the poignant and inspiring story of Saroo Brierley, born in India, lost at the age of five, adopted by an Australian couple and reuniting with his mother and his family twenty-five years later. What else can be said? It’s a simple story but it’s often in the most plain-looking grounds that you can find the most precious gems.

Garth Davis’ “Lion” is indeed simple in its storytelling; it’s linear and straightforward in its clarity. Basically the whole first hour shows poor Saroo looking for his brother Guddu in hostile and overcrowded streets of Calcutta and finding a few moments of relief interrupted by adults, and in the huge lottery of karma, some can look extremely friendly and have sinister motives. But good fate sides with little Saroo and one lucky encounter leading to another, a couple of Australian tourist discovers the ‘wanted notice’ published in a newspaper and they instantly fall in love with the kid and adopt him. Saroo is then taught English and good manners.

Then, something interesting happens: while I expected some resistance, he actually tries to fit in his new family as if he’s aware that there’s something really providential in that couple of good-hearted people from Tasmania, played by Nicole Kidman and David Brienham. The one twist that spoils the family harmony is the adoption of a mentally troubled and self-harming Indian boy named Mantosh one year later. “Lion” manages to say a lot without words, from the reaction of Sunny Pawar, who does a fine, subtle, acting job, I could feel that he didn’t welcome this arrival with much enthusiasm but wouldn’t display jealousy out of love for his new mom.

And the way he grew up was in line with the character. Dev Patel finally makes his entrance as a brilliant young man in his mid-twenties, ready to embrace studies in hotel management, he’s also a nice guy like you seldom see in movies, no tortured soul, no rebel, no wimp either and respectful toward his parents. Seeing Patel again made me regret how harshly I judged “Slumdog Millionnaire” but I never commented his acting but a script that took a rather simplistic turn near the end. So, I was glad to see Patel again, playing another guy trying to find a loved one through a “modern device” but I hoped Davis wouldn’t derail the film from its beautiful simplicity.

And I had a good scare when his soon-to-be girlfriend, played by Rooney Mara, started improvising a little dance on the streets as it almost felt like there would be some Bollywood number, but it was just her twisted way to seduce him, and it worked… well, to some degree. Personally, she struck me as a too cold and sophisticated girl, I didn’t buy that a guy so warm and “sunny” like Saroo would fall in love with a younger version of Kristin Scott Thomas. Even the love scenes made me wonder if Mara wasn’t still under the influence of her previous romance in “Carol”. Never mind, the center of the movie were Patel and Kidman and as soon as Patel has this delicate ‘Proust Madeleine’ moment, the story takes off and with the miracle of “Google Earth”, Saroo tries to find the way back home.

The film tries to inject some ‘suspense’ in that powerful journey but that wasn’t necessary, I think they could have just compressed the ‘research’ within the last weeks before Saroo’s departure and avoided these little ‘pending’ moments, only to focus on the relationship with his adoptive mother and some emotional insights about the heights of generosity some hearts can reach. There were many heartfelt statements about adoption that could have enriched the story but the girlfriend allowed Saroo to explain his existential crisis to the audience without never really existing on her own, I didn’t care for her anyway. The tormented brother could have made a more interesting foil for Saroo and would have provided a fine back-story paralleling Saroo’s experience.

While “Lion” isn’t flawless, it’s a movie whose emotional power relied on the ending, and when Saroo was getting closer to his home, I could find my own heart beating, that’s for the empathy… and that was the price to pay, to earn that teary explosion of happiness and a few emotionally rewarding revelations, concluding one of the few 2016 movies of universal appeal. Indeed, If there ever was one statement to sum up the general appeal of movies, or stories regardless of their narrative medium, I would quote the late Roger Ebert who said “The more specific a film is, the more universal, because the more it understands individual characters, the more it applies to everyone”.

Truer words have never been spoken indeed. Garth Davis’ “Lion” might have an Australian-Indian protagonist but anyone can relate to him, from India, Iceland, Jamaica, Morocco or any part of the world.

Review By: ElMaruecan82

Other Information:

Original Title Lion
Release Date 2016-11-24
Release Year 2016

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 58 min (118 min)
Budget 12000000
Revenue 140312928
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Biography, Drama
Director Garth Davis
Writer Saroo Brierley, Luke Davies
Actors Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman, Rooney Mara
Country Australia, United Kingdom, United States, India
Awards Nominated for 6 Oscars. 59 wins & 110 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 2.39 : 1
Camera Arri Alexa XT M, Panavision PVintage and Ultra Speed MKII Lenses, Arri Alexa XT, Panavision PVintage and Ultra Speed MKII Lenses, Red Epic Dragon, Panavision Primo Lenses (aerial shots)
Laboratory DDP Studios, Melbourne, Australia (digital intermediate)
Film Length N/A
Negative Format Codex, Redcode RAW
Cinematographic Process ARRIRAW (3.4K) (source format), Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Redcode RAW (5K) (source format) (aerial shots)
Printed Film Format D-Cinema

Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Lion 2016 123movies
Original title Lion
TMDb Rating 8.09 5,883 votes

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