

Special shoutout to the young actor who played little Saroo. He managed to make you feel the character's pain just by the way he looked at a jalebi (indian sweet that his brother and him fantasized about back in India).
Lion a long way home movie#
There wasn't a single scene in the movie which doesn't suck you in. The fact that one boy survived this situation and went on to tell his story is very inspiring and this fantastic film did justice to showing it on screen. They either end up dead or in the hands of heartless people who use children for various illegal / unethical operations. This happens there everyday.and most children never find their way back. I mean just the thought of a 5 year old separated from his family for 25 years is bad enough, add in the fact that he was lost in India, a country of over a billion people and was the child of an uneducated poor single mother and you are looking at a very stressful situation. I saw the trailer a few days before the screening and I have to admit the trailer alone made me a little emotional. "I already knew the value of family, but my journey with Saroo had taught me something very personal: without it we are merely chaff in the wind.Just saw this at TIFF. "Arriving home early the next day, I was met by my own family, Belle and Ada, and thanked the heavens that I had them. He said he "was utterly exhausted" by the time he sent the finished manuscript to the publishers from a hotel room in Kolkata.īut while Dr Buttrose learnt much about the resilience of Saroo Brierley, who he described as "very direct and down to earth" and "more Aussie than me", he also gained insight about himself.ĭr Buttrose recalled how he felt upon leaving India in his blog. "When he arrived in Kolkata, that's what he's got memories of." Finishing the storyĭr Buttrose was given a tight three-month deadline to research and write the 70,000-word book. "I said, 'Is this prompting memories, are you getting any thoughts back?', and not much came back. I was trying to get Saroo to go back into that five-year-old mind. "As we travelled across India looking at the vistas of chemical plants and paddy fields with oxen. He also accompanied him to the town of Khandwa where Mr Brierley had found his birth family including his mother, brother and sister some months before.ĭr Buttrose had found an interpreter in the town to help with the meeting, given Mr Brierley had forgotten much of his Hindi having lived in Australia for so long. "Some memories were clearer, but others we needed to go over again and again, because his memories were hazy or something wasn't quite adding up." Retracing Saroo's journeyĭr Buttrose was with Mr Brierley when he retraced his steps for the first time on board the Kolkata Mail train and then through the chaotic streets of Kolkata. "Between interview sessions, Saroo would go home, search his memories, write down notes and bullet points, and then we would sit down together and go over his recollections again," he wrote. In a blogpost written this week, Dr Buttrose recalled those early stages of the book. Saroo Brierley works as a motivational speaker and lives in Hobart.

He recorded hours of interviews, prompting Mr Brierley to return to his earliest memories to piece together his childhood. "It's as good a job as you could have done from that book I finished writing in that hotel room, translated to film." Piecing together faded memoriesĭr Buttrose, who lives in Sydney, had been to India several times and said he believed this was partly the reason Penguin Books chose him for the job.Īs a ghostwriter, he was told to write in "Saroo's voice" and so had to study his idioms and manner of speech over several meetings before the pair travelled to India in 2012. "The screenplay is excellent, the direction by Garth Davis is really superb, particularly how he deals with the actor playing young Saroo, who when he saw the film, had never seen a film before. "From the very first time I came in contact with the story, I knew it was a fantastic story," Dr Buttrose told ABC Radio Sydney. The story is brought to screens in the Hollywood film Lion.
