Genre Movie :Drama,Science Fiction & Fantasy
Mpaa Rating : Unrated Release Date : Apr 26, 2013 Limited Actors :Satya Bhabha,Shahana Goswami,Rajat Kapoor,Seema Biswas,Shriya Saran,Siddharth,Ronit Roy,Rahul Bose,Charles Dance,Kulbhushan Kharbanda,Anupam Kher,Darsheel Safary,Soha Ali Khan,Zaib Shaikh,Samrat Chakrabarti,Shabana Azmi,Sarita Choudhury,Shikha Talsania,Anishkaa Shrivastava,Purav Bhandare
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Review For Midnight's Children
The film is beautifully shot, with vivid production design. But because of the tale's lack of cohesion, it doesn't carry enough emotional heft.Claudia Puig-USA Today
Faithfully adapted from Salman Rushdie's award-winning 1981 novel, the movie feels both too packed and too slight, overflowing with vivid details but lacking the structure to support their weight.
Barbara VanDenburgh-Arizona Republic
There are enough intermittent passages of power and beauty to get you through the slow spots.
Peter Rainer-Christian Science Monitor
A pretty but staidly linear epic drained of the novel's larkish, metaphorical sweep, and a collection of multi-generational love stories lacking their originally eccentric, fizzy charm.
Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times
Mehta has given us something as pale as it is panoramic.
John Anderson-Newsday
Rushdie's characteristic antic humor animates the family scenes, but the movie gets bogged down in endless plot convolutions and whimsy (the material would have worked better as a TV miniseries).
David Denby-New Yorker
Rushdie adeptly trims his sprawling tale down to a still-substantial 2 1/2-hour movie, which only occasionally seems to hurry.
Marc Mohan-Oregonian
Stirring, beautifully filmed and highly personal history of India does right by Salman Rushdie's celebrated novel.
David Noh-Film Journal International
Both dreamy and dramatic, a fascinating view of Indian history seen through the prism of a personal story.
Marshall Fine-Hollywood & Fine
An ambitious film conveying the complicated and violent early history of India and Pakistan through the stories of two boys born on independence day.
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat-Spirituality and Practice
Overproduced.
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve
Deepa Mehta's respectful approach to the material may meander and simplify, but it gradually gains in emotional power, building into a moving account of a man whose many experiences mirror the growing pains of an independent India.
Allan Hunter-Screen International
Preserves much of the novel's intricacy and human drama, perhaps due to Salman Rushdie's involvement as co-screenwriter, even if it remains singularly unremarkable from a cinematic perspective.
Andrew Schenker-Slant Magazine
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